Dispersal by passive oceanic rafting is considered important for the assembly of biotic communities on islands. However, not much is known about levels of population genetic connectivity maintained by rafting over transoceanic distances. We assess the evolutionary impact of kelp-rafting by estimating population genetic differentiation in three kelp-associated invertebrate species across a system of islands isolated by oceanic gaps for over 5 million years, using mtDNA and AFLP markers. The species occur throughout New Zealand's subantarctic islands, but lack pelagic stages and any opportunity for anthropogenic transportation, and hence must rely on passive rafting for long-distance dispersal. They all have been directly observed to survive ...
Ocean currents are an important driver of evolution for sea-dispersed plants, enabling them to maint...
Assessing population connectivity is necessary to construct effective marine protected areas. This c...
We used mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequences to test biogeographic hypotheses for Patiriella exigua (...
Dispersal by passive oceanic rafting is considered important for the assembly of biotic communities ...
Phylogeographic studies indicate that many marine invertebrates lacking autonomous dispersal ability...
Long-distance dispersal (LDD) is thought to be a key driver of biogeographic processes, yet few dire...
Rafting has long been invoked as a key marine dispersal mechanism, but biologists have thus far prod...
Oceanic rafting is thought to play a fundamental role in assembling the biological communities of is...
Coastal populations are often connected by unidirectional current systems, but the biological effect...
The Southern Ocean contains some of the most isolated islands on Earth and fundamental questions rem...
The extent to which marine populations are "open” (panmixia) or "closed” (self-recruitment) remains ...
The role of oceanographic processes in mediating passive marine dispersal events is poorly understoo...
The exchange of individuals between populations influences demographic connectivity on the ecologica...
Long-distance oceanic rafting is frequently invoked as an explanation for broad geographic distribut...
Ocean currents are an important driver of evolution for sea-dispersed plants, enabling them to maint...
Assessing population connectivity is necessary to construct effective marine protected areas. This c...
We used mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequences to test biogeographic hypotheses for Patiriella exigua (...
Dispersal by passive oceanic rafting is considered important for the assembly of biotic communities ...
Phylogeographic studies indicate that many marine invertebrates lacking autonomous dispersal ability...
Long-distance dispersal (LDD) is thought to be a key driver of biogeographic processes, yet few dire...
Rafting has long been invoked as a key marine dispersal mechanism, but biologists have thus far prod...
Oceanic rafting is thought to play a fundamental role in assembling the biological communities of is...
Coastal populations are often connected by unidirectional current systems, but the biological effect...
The Southern Ocean contains some of the most isolated islands on Earth and fundamental questions rem...
The extent to which marine populations are "open” (panmixia) or "closed” (self-recruitment) remains ...
The role of oceanographic processes in mediating passive marine dispersal events is poorly understoo...
The exchange of individuals between populations influences demographic connectivity on the ecologica...
Long-distance oceanic rafting is frequently invoked as an explanation for broad geographic distribut...
Ocean currents are an important driver of evolution for sea-dispersed plants, enabling them to maint...
Assessing population connectivity is necessary to construct effective marine protected areas. This c...
We used mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequences to test biogeographic hypotheses for Patiriella exigua (...