Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2017
Keywords
cryptogenic, cosmopolitan, Old World, New World, Gulf of Mexico
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
https://doi.org/10.7287/peerj.preprints.3497v1
Abstract
The native ranges and invasion histories of many marine species remain elusive due to a dynamic dispersal process via marine vessels. Molecular markers can aid in identification of native ranges and elucidation of the introduction and establishment process. The supralittoral isopod Ligia exotica has a wide tropical and subtropical distribution, frequently found in harbors and ports around the globe. This isopod is hypothesized to have an Old World origin, from where it was unintentionally introduced to other regions via wooden ships and solid ballast. Its native range, however, remains uncertain. Recent molecular studies uncovered the presence of two highly divergent lineages of L. exotica in East Asia, and suggest this region is a source of nonindigenous populations. In this study, we conducted phylogenetic analyses (Maximum Likelihood and Bayesian) of a fragment of the mitochondrial 16S ribosomal (r)DNA gene using a dataset of this isopod that greatly expanded previous representation from Asia and putative nonindigenous populations around the world. For a subset of samples, sequences of 12S rDNA and NaK were also obtained and analyzed together with 16S rDNA. Our results show that L. exotica is comprised of several highly divergent genetic lineages, which probably represent different species. Most of the 16S rDNA genetic diversity (48 haplotypes) was detected in East and Southeast Asia. Only seven haplotypes were observed outside this region (in the Americas, Hawai’i, Africa and India), which were identical or closely related to haplotypes found in East and Southeast Asia. Phylogenetic patterns indicate the L. exotica clade originated and diversified in East and Southeast Asia, and only members of one of the divergent lineages have spread out of this region, recently, suggesting the potential to become invasive is phylogenetically constrained.
Rights Information
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
Was this content written or created while at USF?
Yes
Citation / Publisher Attribution
PeerJ, v. 5, art. e3497
Scholar Commons Citation
Hurtado, Luis A.; Mateos, Mariana; Wang, Chang; Santamaria, Carlos A.; Jung, Jongwoo; Khalaji-Pirbalouty, Valiallah; and Kim, Won, "Out of Asia: Mitochondrial Evolutionary History of the Globally Introduced Supralittoral Isopod Ligia exotica" (2017). Mathematics and Statistics Faculty Publications. 87.
https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/mth_facpub/87