Despite its importance, we still have a poor understanding of the level of connectivity between marine populations in most geographical locations. Taking advantage of the natural features of the southeast coast of New Zealand's North Island, we deployed a series of settlement stations and conducted plankton tows to capture recent settlers and planktonic larvae of the common intertidal gastropod Austrolittorina cincta (6-8 week larval period). Satellite image analysis and ground truthing surveys revealed the absence of suitable intertidal rocky shore habitat for A. cincta over a 100 km stretch of coastline between Kapiti Island to the south and Wanganui to the north. Fifteen settlement stations (3 replicates × 5 sites), which were used to mi...
The geological origin of central Pacific islands by volcanic activity at "hot spots" through a pre-e...
Understanding the processes that drive the recruitment of invasive non-native species is of critical...
The interconnected nature of the oceans, the small size and passive nature of larvae has resulted in...
Determining the magnitude of dispersal and connectivity between populations has important implicatio...
Phylogeographic studies indicate that many marine invertebrates lacking autonomous dispersal ability...
The application of high-resolution genetic data has revealed that oceanographic connectivity in mari...
Demographic connectivity is fundamental to the persistence and resilience of metapopulations, but ou...
The extent to which marine populations are "open” (panmixia) or "closed” (self-recruitment) remains ...
Broadcast-spawning marine organisms with long pelagic larval duration are often expected to be genet...
1. Ten species of prosobranch gastropod veligers collected from the open waters of the North Atlanti...
Marine species in the Indo-Pacific have ranges that can span thousands of kilometers, yet studies in...
In many marine invertebrates, long-distance dispersal is achieved during an extended pelagic larval ...
Pulmonate slugs of the genus Onchidella commonly inhabit the intertidal rocky shores of southern con...
The geological origin of central Pacific islands by volcanic activity at "hot spots" through a pre-e...
Understanding the processes that drive the recruitment of invasive non-native species is of critical...
The interconnected nature of the oceans, the small size and passive nature of larvae has resulted in...
Determining the magnitude of dispersal and connectivity between populations has important implicatio...
Phylogeographic studies indicate that many marine invertebrates lacking autonomous dispersal ability...
The application of high-resolution genetic data has revealed that oceanographic connectivity in mari...
Demographic connectivity is fundamental to the persistence and resilience of metapopulations, but ou...
The extent to which marine populations are "open” (panmixia) or "closed” (self-recruitment) remains ...
Broadcast-spawning marine organisms with long pelagic larval duration are often expected to be genet...
1. Ten species of prosobranch gastropod veligers collected from the open waters of the North Atlanti...
Marine species in the Indo-Pacific have ranges that can span thousands of kilometers, yet studies in...
In many marine invertebrates, long-distance dispersal is achieved during an extended pelagic larval ...
Pulmonate slugs of the genus Onchidella commonly inhabit the intertidal rocky shores of southern con...
The geological origin of central Pacific islands by volcanic activity at "hot spots" through a pre-e...
Understanding the processes that drive the recruitment of invasive non-native species is of critical...
The interconnected nature of the oceans, the small size and passive nature of larvae has resulted in...