Largely understudied, mesophotic coral ecosystems lie below shallow reefs (at >30 m depth) and comprise ecologically distinct communities. Brooding reproductive modes appear to predominate among mesophotic-specialist corals and may limit genetic connectivity among populations. Using reduced representation genomic sequencing, we assessed spatial population genetic structure at 50 m depth in an ecologically important mesophotic-specialist species Agaricia grahamae, among locations in the Southern Caribbean. We also tested for hybridisation with the closely related (but depth-generalist) species Agaricia lamarcki, within their sympatric depth zone (50 m). In contrast to our expectations, no spatial genetic structure was detected between the re...
© 2020 The Authors. Journal of Evolutionary Biology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of ...
The extent to which reefs are effectively connected to one another, and their potential to serve as ...
Understanding patterns of connectivity among populations of marine organisms is essential for the de...
Successful management of spatially isolated coral reefs is contingent on an understanding of ecologi...
Mesophotic coral reefs (30-150 m) have recently received increased attention as a potential source o...
The Deep Reef Refugia Hypothesis proposes that deep reefs can act as local recruitment sources for s...
Background Scleractinian corals and their algal endosymbionts (genus Symbiodinium) exhibit distinct ...
International audience: The deep reef refugia hypothesis proposes that deep reefs can act as local r...
Deep coral reefs (that is, mesophotic coral ecosystems) can act as refuges against major disturbance...
Identifying genetic connectivity and discrete population boundaries is an important objective for ma...
Mesophotic reef-building coral communities (~30–120 m depth) remain largely unexplored, despite repr...
Patterns of isolation-by-distance are uncommon in coral populations. Here, we depart from historical...
© 2020 The Authors. Journal of Evolutionary Biology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of ...
The extent to which reefs are effectively connected to one another, and their potential to serve as ...
Understanding patterns of connectivity among populations of marine organisms is essential for the de...
Successful management of spatially isolated coral reefs is contingent on an understanding of ecologi...
Mesophotic coral reefs (30-150 m) have recently received increased attention as a potential source o...
The Deep Reef Refugia Hypothesis proposes that deep reefs can act as local recruitment sources for s...
Background Scleractinian corals and their algal endosymbionts (genus Symbiodinium) exhibit distinct ...
International audience: The deep reef refugia hypothesis proposes that deep reefs can act as local r...
Deep coral reefs (that is, mesophotic coral ecosystems) can act as refuges against major disturbance...
Identifying genetic connectivity and discrete population boundaries is an important objective for ma...
Mesophotic reef-building coral communities (~30–120 m depth) remain largely unexplored, despite repr...
Patterns of isolation-by-distance are uncommon in coral populations. Here, we depart from historical...
© 2020 The Authors. Journal of Evolutionary Biology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of ...
The extent to which reefs are effectively connected to one another, and their potential to serve as ...
Understanding patterns of connectivity among populations of marine organisms is essential for the de...