Expanding dispersal studies at hydrothermal vents through species identification of cryptic larval forms
Expanding dispersal studies at hydrothermal vents through species identification of cryptic larval forms
Date
2010-01
Authors
Adams, Diane K.
Mills, Susan W.
Shank, Timothy M.
Mullineaux, Lauren S.
Mills, Susan W.
Shank, Timothy M.
Mullineaux, Lauren S.
Linked Authors
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Date Created
Location
DOI
Related Materials
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Keywords
Hydrothermal vent
Larvae
Protoconch
Gastropod
Lepetodrilus
Peltospira
RFLP
Barcode
Egg capsules
Larvae
Protoconch
Gastropod
Lepetodrilus
Peltospira
RFLP
Barcode
Egg capsules
Abstract
The rapid identification of hydrothermal vent-endemic larvae to the species level is a key
limitation to understanding the dynamic processes that control the abundance and
distribution of fauna in such a patchy and ephemeral environment. Many larval forms
collected near vents, even those in groups such as gastropods that often form a
morphologically distinct larval shell, have not been identified to species. We present a
staged approach that combines morphological and molecular identification to optimize
the capability, efficiency, and economy of identifying vent gastropod larvae from the
northern East Pacific Rise (NEPR). With this approach, 15 new larval forms can be
identified to species. A total of 33 of the 41 gastropod species inhabiting the NEPR, and
26 of the 27 gastropod species known to occur specifically in the 9° 50’ N region, can be
identified to species. Morphological identification efforts are improved by new
protoconch descriptions for Gorgoleptis spiralis, Lepetodrilus pustulosus, Nodopelta
subnoda, and Echinopelta fistulosa. Even with these new morphological descriptions, the
majority of lepetodrilids and peltospirids require molecular identification. Restriction
fragment length polymorphism digests are presented as an economical method for
identification of five species of Lepetodrilus and six species of peltospirids. The
remaining unidentifiable specimens can be assigned to species by comparison to an
expanded database of 18S ribosomal DNA. The broad utility of the staged approach was
exemplified by the revelation of species-level variation in daily planktonic samples and
the identification and characterization of egg capsules belonging to a conid gastropod
Gymnobela sp. A. The improved molecular and morphological capabilities nearly double
the number of species amenable to field studies of dispersal and population connectivity.
Description
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2010. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Springer for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Marine Biology 157 (2010): 1049-1062, doi:10.1007/s00227-009-1386-8.