Mating system and evidence of multiple paternity in the Antarctic brooding sea urchin Abatus agassizii

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TitreMating system and evidence of multiple paternity in the Antarctic brooding sea urchin Abatus agassizii
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2017
AuteursMaturana CS, Gerard K, Diaz A, David B, Feral J-P, Poulin E
JournalPOLAR BIOLOGY
Volume40
Pagination787-797
Date PublishedAPR
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN0722-4060
Mots-clésPanmixia, Parentage analysis, Polyandry, Spermcast, Vagility
Résumé

Broadcasting is the predominant spawning behavior among benthic marine invertebrates, mainly associated with planktotrophic and planktonic lecitotrophic development. Broadcasting allows genetic mixing that should contribute to increase the genetic diversity of a female clutch. Conversely, in brooding species characterized by protected development, oocytes are retained and only sperm is released, which is supposed to limit the number of males that contribute to a female clutch. This spermcasting behavior together with egg retention, unusually frequent among Antarctic marine invertebrates, putatively give brooders low dispersal capacities which may reduce genetic mixing and generate genetic and kinship structure at a small spatial scale. Like many other Antarctic marine benthic invertebrates, the irregular sea urchin Abatus agassizii is a spermcaster that broods its young. In this study, we assessed the genetic diversity among 66 adults using 6 polymorphic microsatellite loci and performed progeny array analyses in order to evaluate the number of mates per female as well as genetic structure at a small spatial scale. A. agassizii exhibited a polyandric system with 2-5 mates per female regardless of population density. Bayesian analyses suggested the absence of genetic structure along our 20-m transect, while relatedness among individuals did not differ from that expected under panmixia. Finally, we conclude that a limited number of males contribute to a female clutch, probably as a consequence of limited sperm dispersal and that movement of adults may be sufficient to avoid kinship structure in the population.

DOI10.1007/s00300-016-2001-3