Skip to main content
Dryad

Data from: Out of the Mediterranean? post-glacial colonisation pathways varied among cold-water coral species

Cite this dataset

Boavida, Joana et al. (2019). Data from: Out of the Mediterranean? post-glacial colonisation pathways varied among cold-water coral species [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.390js8n

Abstract

Aim. To infer cold-water corals' post-glacial phylogeography and assess the role of Mediterranean Sea glacial refugia as origins for the recolonisation of the northeastern Atlantic Ocean. Location. Northeastern Atlantic Ocean and Mediterranean Sea. Taxon. Lophelia pertusa, Madrepora oculata. Methods. We sampled cold-water corals using remotely operated vehicles and one sediment core for coral and sediment dating. We characterized spatial genetic patterns (microsatellites and a nuclear gene fragment) using networks, clustering and measures of genetic differentiation. Results. Inferences from microsatellite and sequence data were congruent, and showed a contrast between the two cold-water coral species. Populations of L. pertusa present a dominant pioneer haplotype, local haplotype radiations and a majority of endemic variation in lower latitudes. M. oculata populations are differentiated across the northeastern Atlantic and genetic lineages are poorly admixed even among neighbouring sites. Conclusions. Our study shows contrasting post-glacial colonisation pathways for two key habitat-forming species in the deep-sea. The cold-water coral L. pertusa has likely undertaken a long-range (post-glacial) recolonisation of the northeastern Atlantic directly from refugia located along southern Europe (Mediterranean Sea or Gulf of Cadiz). In contrast, the stronger genetic differentiation of M. oculata populations mirrors the effects of long-term isolation in multiple refugia. We suggest that the distinct and genetically divergent, refugial populations initiated the post-glacial recolonisation of the northeastern Atlantic margins, leading to a secondary contact in the northern range and reaching higher latitudes much later, in the late Holocene. This study highlights the need to disentangle the influences of present-day dispersal and evolutionary processes on the distribution of genetic polymorphisms, to unravel the influence of past and future environmental changes on the connectivity of cosmopolitan deep-sea ecosystems associated with cold-water corals.

Usage notes

Location

Bay of Biscay
Irish Sea
South Iceland
Mediterranean Sea