0000000000049706
AUTHOR
Jakob Müller
Genetic and morphological differentiation ofDikerogammarusinvaders and their invasion history in Central Europe
SUMMARY 1. Biological invasions often involve close taxonomic relatives either as native/invader pairs or as invader/invader pairs. Precise identification and differentiation of species is therefore of paramount importance to reconstruct the invasion history. Genetic studies are indispensable in the case of morphologically conservative taxonomic groups. 2. We analysed the Pontocaspian freshwater amphipods Dikerogammarus that have successfully invaded the benthos of large Central European rivers. Taxonomic uncertainties were clarified by phylogenetic analyses of mitochondrial 16S and COI genes. The three-way partitioning of allozyme genotypes in a syntopic population further corroborated the…
Invasion history and genetic population structure of riverine macroinvertebrates.
Summary Macroinvertebrate communities of large rivers have experienced dramatic species turnovers in the last decades, which still go on. The analysis of genetic population structure plays a central role in understanding and predicting these biological invasions. Two points of view are considered: the influence of the invasion history on the genetic structuring and the potential implications of genetic structure for future invasibility. Expectations about selectively neutral genetic variation in simple invasion models are compared to case studies of amphipods and Dreissena. The genetic patterns of one amphipod species of the Gammarus fossarum complex yield strong evidence for a stepwise reg…
Canal construction destroys the barrier between major European invasion lineages of the zebra mussel.
Since the mid-1980s the zebra mussel, Dreissena polymorpha, Pallas 1771, has become the protagonist of a spectacular freshwater invasion in North America due to its large economic and biological impact. Several genetic studies on American populations have failed to detect any large-scale geographical patterns. In western Europe, where D. polymorpha has been a classical invader from the Pontocaspian since the early 19th century, the situation is strikingly different. Here, we show with genetic markers that two major western European invasion lineages with lowered genetic variability within and among populations can be discriminated. These two invasion lineages correspond with two separate na…
Mitochondrial DNA variation and the evolutionary history of cryptic Gammarus fossarum types.
The evolutionary history of the cryptic Gammarus fossarum species complex (Crustacea, Amphipoda) in Central Europe was approached by investigating the genetic variation in populations of a natural contact zone. Nucleotide sequence variation of a 395-bp segment of the mitochondrial 16S rRNA gene was compared to that of six nuclear allozyme loci. Three major mtDNA lineages were found, the eastern clade being consistent with the former allozyme type A. The two western clades (types B and C) were not distinguished previously. Strong sequence divergence and correlation with nuclear genetic isolation in syntopic populations, however, justifies the specific status of the three G. fossarum types. T…
Differences in allozyme patterns between Diaphanosoma brachyurum and Diaphanosoma mongolianum, as revealed in Central European populations
Recent taxonomic revisions in the genus Diaphanosoma have made the uncertainty in species discrimination with morphological characters obvious. Therefore species characterization on a genetic basis seems to be required. Here we examined the genetic structure of two Diaphanosoma mongolianum populations and three Diaphanosoma brachyurum populations in Central Europe by allozyme electrophoresis. A genetic differentiation between both species was evident. 5 out of 9 tested loci carried diagnostic alleles. Both species differed in their habitat choice: D. mongolianum was adapted to higher trophic levels than D. brachyurum. Co-occurrence was observed in a eutrophic lake. Populations sampled from …
Differentiation in morphology and habitat partitioning of genetically characterized Gammarus fossarum forms (Amphipoda) across a contact zone
Evolutionary processes do not affect all character types equally. Depending on environmental effects, morphological and ecological evolution may be uncoupled from molecular evolution. A natural contact zone between two forms of the amphipod Gammarus fossarum was used to assess the levels of differentiation in genetic, morphological and habitat characters. About 50 individuals per population were analysed for six enzyme loci in 72 populations and four size-standardized morphometric traits in a subset of 32 populations. Nine environmental parameters per population were used to characterize the habitat. All three character sets revealed significant divergences between G. fossarum forms. The ea…