Loss of species and genetic diversity during colonization: Insights from acanthocephalan parasites in northern European seals
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/31632Dato
2023-10-19Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Sromek, Ludmila; Ylinen, Eeva; Kunnasranta, Mervi; Maduna, Simo; Sinisalo, Tuula; Michell, Craig T.; Kovacs, Kit M.; Lydersen, Christian; Ieshko, Evgeny; Andrievskaya, Elena; Alexeev, Vyacheslav; Leidenberger, Sonja; Hagen, Snorre; Nyman, TommiSammendrag
Studies on host–parasite systems that have experienced distributional shifts, range
fragmentation, and population declines in the past can provide information regarding how parasite community richness and genetic diversity will change as a result of
anthropogenic environmental changes in the future. Here, we studied how sequential postglacial colonization, shifts in habitat, and reduced host population sizes have
influenced species richness and genetic diversity of Corynosoma (Acanthocephala:
Polymorphidae) parasites in northern European marine, brackish, and freshwater seal
populations. We collected Corynosoma population samples from Arctic, Baltic, Ladoga,
and Saimaa ringed seal subspecies and Baltic gray seals, and then applied COI barcoding and triple-enzyme restriction-site associated DNA (3RAD) sequencing to delimit
species, clarify their distributions and community structures, and elucidate patterns
of intraspecific gene flow and genetic diversity. Our results showed that Corynosoma
species diversity reflected host colonization histories and population sizes, with four
species being present in the Arctic, three in the Baltic Sea, two in Lake Ladoga, and
only one in Lake Saimaa. We found statistically significant population-genetic differentiation within all three Corynosoma species that occur in more than one seal (sub)
species. Genetic diversity tended to be high in Corynosoma populations originating
from Arctic ringed seals and low in the landlocked populations. Our results indicate
that acanthocephalan communities in landlocked seal populations are impoverished
with respect to both species and intraspecific genetic diversity. Interestingly, the loss
of genetic diversity within Corynosoma species seems to have been less drastic than
in their seal hosts, possibly due to their large local effective population sizes resulting
from high infection intensities and effective intra-host population mixing. Our study
highlights the utility of genomic methods in investigations of community composition
and genetic diversity of understudied parasites.
Forlag
WileySitering
Sromek, Ylinen, Kunnasranta, Maduna, Sinisalo, Michell, Kovacs, Lydersen, Ieshko, Andrievskaya, Alexeev, Leidenberger, Hagen, Nyman. Loss of species and genetic diversity during colonization: Insights from acanthocephalan parasites in northern European seals. Ecology and Evolution. 2023;13(10)Metadata
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