High genetic variability and patchiness in a common Great Barrier Reef zoanthid (Palythoa caesia) |
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Authors: | W. J. Burnett J. A. H. Benzie J. A. Beardmore J. S. Ryland |
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Affiliation: | (1) School of Biological Sciences, University of Wales, Swansea, Singleton Park, SA2 8PP Swansea, South Wales, UK;(2) Australian Institute of Marine Science, PMB 3, 4810 Townsville MC, Queensland, Australia |
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Abstract: | Allozyme electrophoretic analysis of seven polymorphic enzyme loci suggested that 1261 samples of Palythoa collected along 1765 km of the Great Barrier Reef during 1992–1993 were members of a single taxon, identified as Palythoa caesia Dana, 1846, with high external morphological variability and possibly encompassing several previously described species. Populations were slightly genetically differentiated (standardized genetic variance, FST=0.010, p<0.05), but there was no evidence of isolation by distance, or of the particular genetic distinction of geographic sets of reefs such as the Swains, as has been observed in other invertebrates. Differentiation was thought to be the result of random selection acting on patches of larvae, not the consequences of long-term reproductive isolation of populations. |
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