Fossil Acropora prolifera (Lamarck, 1816) reveals coral hybridization is not only a recent phenomenon

IF 0.5 4区 生物学 Q3 Agricultural and Biological Sciences Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington Pub Date : 2019-04-17 DOI:10.2988/18-D-18-00011
W. Precht, S. Vollmer, Alexander B. Modys, L. Kaufman
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引用次数: 8

Abstract

Abstract. Acropora prolifera is an ecologically distinctive western Atlantic reef-building coral that originates from hybridization and back-crossing between A. palmata and A. cervicornis. It has been suggested that A. prolifera might be a recent product of precipitous decline in the abundance of the two parent species, forcing hybridization where both it and its product might not otherwise be prevalent phenomena. We present evidence that A. prolifera has a fossil record dating back to at least the late Pleistocene, and that it was ecologically significant prior to the region-wide die-back of acroporid corals. These data, when taken collectively, reveal that hybridization in the Caribbean acroporids is historically rooted and not a recent artifact of changes in Caribbean reef ecology. It is becoming apparent that hybrid taxa likely play an important but underappreciated role in coral reef ecology and reef-building more generally. This is consistent with recent recognition that interspecific hybridization can drive evolutionary innovation and cladogenesis in animals as well as plants.
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prolifera Acropora化石(Lamarck,1816)揭示珊瑚杂交不仅是最近的现象
摘要Acropora prolifera是一种生态独特的西大西洋造礁珊瑚,起源于A.palmata和A.cercornis之间的杂交和反向杂交。有人认为,A.prolifera可能是两个亲本物种丰度急剧下降的最近产物,迫使其杂交,否则它及其产物可能不会成为普遍现象。我们提供的证据表明,A.prolifera的化石记录至少可以追溯到更新世晚期,并且在全地区的顶孔珊瑚灭绝之前,它具有重要的生态意义。这些数据综合起来表明,加勒比顶孔虫的杂交是历史性的,而不是加勒比珊瑚礁生态变化的近期产物。越来越明显的是,杂交类群可能在珊瑚礁生态和更广泛的造礁中发挥着重要但未被充分重视的作用。这与最近的认识一致,即种间杂交可以推动动物和植物的进化创新和分支形成。
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期刊介绍: The official publication of the Biological Society of Washington, the Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington is an international journal containing peer-reviewed papers that broadly bear on systematics in the biological sciences (botany and zoology), paleontology, and notices of business transacted at Society meetings.
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