| Literature DB >> 26164681 |
Carla Micheli1, Daniela D'Esposito2, Alessandro Belmonte1, Andrea Peirano3, Luigi Maria Valiante4, Gabriele Procaccini5.
Abstract
Posidonia oceanica meadows growing along the west Mediterranean coastline are under continuous anthropogenic pressure. The way meadow health correlates with genetic and genotypic diversity in P. oceanica, is still under debate. Here we report a microsatellite analysis of two P. oceanica meadows living in protected areas of the Ligurian (Monterosso al Mare, MPA of "Cinque Terre") and central Tyrrhenian Sea (Santa Marinella, regional Site of Community Importance). Both meadows were recently classified as "disturbed", according to shoot density and other phenological parameters. Between the two meadows, Santa Marinella showed higher genetic diversity, while clear genetic substructure was present in both sites, reflecting high spatial heterogeneity. The present study suggests that genetic diversity does not match unequivocally with shoot density and leaf morphology and that small scale intra-meadow heterogeneity is an important factor to consider for establishing the relation between genetic/genotypic variability and health of natural seagrass meadows.Entities:
Keywords: Anthropogenic impact; Ligurian – central Tyrrhenian sea; Population genetics; Posidonia oceanica; Seagrass; microsatellites
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26164681 DOI: 10.1016/j.marenvres.2015.06.016
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mar Environ Res ISSN: 0141-1136 Impact factor: 3.130