22 resultados para Zostera marina.


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Seagrasses are one of the most productive and economically important habitats in the coastal zone, but they are disappearing at an alarming rate, with more than half the world’s seagrass area lost since the 1990s. They now face serious threat from climate change, and there is much current speculation over whether they will survive the coming decades. The future of seagrasses depends on their ability to recover and adapt to environmental change—i.e. their ‘resilience’. Key to this, is understanding the role that genetic diversity plays in the resilience of this highly clonal group of species. To investigate population structure, genetic diversity, mating system (sexual versus asexual reproduction) and patterns of connectivity, we isolated and characterised 23 microsatellite loci using next generation sequencing for the Australian seagrass species, Zostera muelleri (syn. Z. capricorni), which is regarded as a globally significant congeneric species. Loci were tested for levels of variation based on eight individuals sampled from Lake Macquarie, New South Wales, Australia. We detected high to moderate levels of genetic variation across most loci with a mean allelic richness of 3.64 and unbiased expected hetrozygosity of 0.562. We found no evidence for linkage disequilibrium between any loci and only three loci (ZosNSW25, ZosNSW2, and ZosNSW47) showed significant deviations from Hardy–Weinberg expectations. All individuals displayed a unique multi-locus genotype and the combined probability of identity across all loci was low (P ID = 1.87 × 10−12) indicating a high level of power in detecting unique genotypes. These 23 markers will provide an important tool for future population genetic assessments in this important keystone species.

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Understanding how multiple environmental stressors interact to affect seagrass health (measured as morphological and physiological responses) is important for responding to global declines in seagrass populations. We investigated the interactive effects of temperature stress (24, 27, 30 and 32°C) and shading stress (75, 50, 25 and 0% shade treatments) on the seagrass Zostera muelleri over a 3-month period in laboratory mesocosms. Z. muelleri is widely distributed throughout the temperate and tropical waters of south and east coasts of Australia, and is regarded as a regionally significant species. Optimal growth was observed at 27°C, whereas rapid loss of living shoots and leaf mass occurred at 32°C. We found no difference in the concentration of photosynthetic pigments among temperature treatments by the end of the experiment; however, up-regulation of photoprotective pigments was observed at 30°C. Greater levels of shade resulting in high photochemical efficiencies, while elevated irradiance suppressed effective quantum yield (ΔF/FM'). Chlorophyll fluorescence fast induction curves (FIC) revealed that the J step amplitude was significantly higher in the 0% shade treatment after 8 weeks, indicating a closure of PSII reaction centres, which likely contributed to the decline in ΔF/FM' and photoinhibition under higher irradiance. Effective quantum yield of PSII (ΔF/FM') declined steadily in 32°C treatments, indicating thermal damage. Higher temperatures (30°C) resulted in reduced above-ground biomass ratio and smaller leaves, while reduced light led to a reduction in leaf and shoot density, above-ground biomass ratio, shoot biomass and an increase in leaf senescence. Surprisingly, light and temperature had few interactive effects on seagrass health, even though these two stressors had strong effects on seagrass health when tested in isolation. In summary, these results demonstrate that populations of Z. muelleri in south-eastern Australia are sensitive to small chronic temperature increases and light decreases that are predicted under future climate change scenarios.

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The process of biological invasion exposes a species to novel pressures, in terms of both the environments it encounters and the evolutionary consequences of range expansion. Several invaders have been shown to exhibit rapid evolutionary changes in response to those pressures, thus providing robust opportunities to clarify the processes at work during rapid phenotypic transitions. The accelerating pace of invasion of cane toads (Rhinella marina) in tropical Australia during its 80-year history has been well characterized at the phenotypic level, including common-garden experiments that demonstrate heritability of several dispersal-relevant traits. Individuals from the invasion front (and their progeny) show distinctive changes in morphology, physiology and behaviour that, in combination, result in far more rapid dispersal than is true of conspecifics from long-colonized areas. The extensive body of work on cane toad ecology enables us to place into context studies of the genetic basis of these traits. Our analyses of differential gene expression from toads from both ends of this invasion-history transect reveal substantial upregulation of many genes, notably those involved in metabolism and cellular repair. Clearly, then, the dramatically rapid phenotypic evolution of cane toads in Australia has been accompanied by substantial shifts in gene expression, suggesting that this system is well suited to investigating the genetic underpinnings of invasiveness.

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Data from seed germination experiment to determine the impact of temperature, salinity, sediment type and sediment depth on seed germination.