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Articles

Phylogeography of Asparagopsis taxiformis (Bonnemaisoniales, Rhodophyta) in the Hawaiian Islands: two mtDNA markers support three separate introductions

Pages 79-88 | Received 25 May 2007, Accepted 13 Sep 2007, Published online: 22 Apr 2019
 

Abstract

A.R. Sherwood. 2008. Phylogeography of Asparagopsis taxiformis (Bonnemaisoniales, Rhodophyta) in the Hawaiian Islands: two mtDNA markers support three separate introductions. Phycologia 47:79–88. DOI: 10.2216/07-39.1

Fifty-six samples of the gametophyte stage of Asparagopsis taxiformis, principally from the Main and Northwestern Hawaiian Islands, were obtained from field collections and archived herbarium material. Of these, 36 were successfully sequenced for the cox2-3 spacer region, and 42 for the COI gene. Parsimony analyses of both regions for the Hawaiian collections revealed relationships that were consistent with those previously published for global A. taxiformis samples, which also included a number from the Hawaiian Islands. The Main Hawaiian Islands are dominated by lineage 1, which is known from the Pacific coast of Central America and Hawai‘i. The Northwestern Hawaiian Islands, with one exception, contain a single widespread lineage (2) that is known from the Indo-Pacific, central Mediterranean and southern Portugal. A third lineage (4) is present in Hawai‘i only along a localized region of the south shore of O'ahu, but is widespread in tropical and subtropical waters outside of the Hawaiian Islands. Based on collection dates from archived herbarium material and the distributional trends of the lineages within the Hawaiian Islands, lineage 2 is hypothesized to be the original ‘native’ lineage of this species in the Hawaiian archipelago, and lineage 4 may have arrived as recently as 1991. COI and cox2-3 spacer sequences were always in accordance for lineage assignment of A. taxiformis samples, and future studies may only need to sequence one of the two markers.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

The author sincerely thanks Napua Harbottle and Dr. Neal Evenhuis of the Bernice P. Bishop Museum for their support and cooperation of molecular analyses with accessioned herbarium material. Collecting assistance from Kimberly Conklin, Akira Kurihara, Daniel O'Doherty, Larson Palsis, Thomas Sauvage and Zac McCorkhill is gratefully acknowledged. Sincere thanks are given to Akira Kurihara for generously providing the Costa Rican samples for this study, and to Nikos Andreakis for helpful correspondence regarding this study. ARS would like to thank Drs. Isabella Abbott and Akira Kurihara for critically reading the manuscript. This research was supported by NSF grant DEB-0542608 to ARS and Gernot Presting. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this publication are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.

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