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Genetic analysis of a recently established Undaria pinnatifida (Laminariales: Alariaceae) population in the northern Wadden Sea reveals close proximity between drifting thalli and the attached population

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Pages 154-161
Received 13 Mar 2018
Accepted 21 Jul 2018
Published online: 01 Mar 2019
 
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ABSTRACT

Undaria pinnatifida, a kelp species native to East Asia, has become cosmopolitan and drawn increasing attention due to its worldwide spread in recent decades. Floating fragments of this alga were found washed ashore on Sylt in 2016, the first record of this species in Germany. Thalli attached to local oyster reefs were detected in 2017. The genetic relationship between the floating and attached thalli on Sylt, as well as their relevance to the populations from northern Europe and native regions, was hitherto unknown. Here, 10 microsatellite markers were used to assess relationships between the recently established population on Sylt and five other northern European populations in France (Brittany, West English Channel), the Netherlands and England (Plymouth, West English Channel) plus three natural populations in China. Almost no genetic differentiation was detected between the floating and attached populations on Sylt, but they were genetically distinct from all the other studied northern European populations. The very low genetic diversity revealed in the new founder populations of Sylt suggests that they came from genetically similar parents. The marked reduction in both the number of alleles and heterozygosity in the northern European populations, as compared with the Chinese ones, is typical of founder effects in recently populated regions. Prominent genetic divergence was found between most of the northern European populations except those within Brittany and Sylt. Further studies will focus on identifying the putative source populations that might be found on shellfish farms, in local marinas or the benthic habitats around Sylt Island.

Acknowledgements

We would like to thank Mingfu Zhang for assistance with samples collection in China. We appreciate very much the reviewers’ constructive comments and suggestions.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Supplementary information

The following supplementary material is accessible via the Supplementary Content tab on the article’s online page at http://doi.org/10.1080/09670262.2018.1532116

Supplementary table S1. Sampling information for the wild populations of Undaria pinnatifida from northern Europe and China.

Supplementary table S2. Genetic diversity of the populations of Undaria pinnatifida from northern Europe and China at each microsatellite locus.

Supplementary fig. S1. Neighbour-joining dendrogram based on genetic distance among the populations of Undaria pinnatifida from northern Europe and China. The bar indicates the genetic distance.

Supplementary fig. S2. Delta-K graph obtained by submitting all results files of K = 2 to 10 to STRUCTURE HARVESTER.

Author contributions

S. Pang, K. Bischof and T. Shan conceived the study; T. Shan, X. Wang, J. Li, L. Su and J. Schiller performed lab work; T. Shan and X. Wang performed genetic analysis; J. Schiller, D. Lackschewitz and J. M. Hall-Spencer collected specimens from Germany and the UK. Everyone contributed to specimen collection and manuscript writing.

Additional information

Funding

This research was supported by projects from the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 41676128, 41476141 and 31702365), the Sino-German Science Center (GZ 1080), the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Bi 772/14-1), China Agriculture Research System (CARS-50), the National Key Technology Support Program (2015BAD13B05), the National Infrastructure of Fishery Germplasm Resource (2018DKA30470), the Taishan Scholar Program of Shandong Province and the Foundation for Huiquan Scholar of Institute of Oceanology, Chinese Academy of Sciences.

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