| Literature DB >> 31019910 |
John A Darling1, James T Carlton2,3.
Abstract
Recent years have witnessed growing appreciation for the ways in which human-mediated species introductions have reshaped marine biogeography. Despite this we have yet to grapple fully with the scale and impact of anthropogenic dispersal in both creating and determining contemporary distributions of marine taxa. In particular, the past several decades of research on marine biological invasions have revealed that broad geographic distributions of coastal marine organisms-historically referred to simply as "cosmopolitanism"-may belie complex interplay of both natural and anthropogenic processes. Here we describe a framework for understanding contemporary cosmopolitanism, informed by a synthesis of the marine bioinvasion literature. Our framework defines several novel categories in an attempt to provide a unified terminology for discussing cosmopolitan distributions in the world's oceans. We reserve the term eucosmopolitan to refer to those species for which data exist to support a true, natural, and prehistorically global (or extremely broad) distribution. While in the past this has been the default assumption for species observed to exhibit contemporary cosmopolitan distributions, we argue that given recent advances in marine invasion science this assignment should require positive evidence. In contrast, neocosmopolitan describes those species that have demonstrably achieved extensive geographic ranges only through historical anthropogenic dispersal, often facilitated over centuries of human maritime traffic. We discuss the history and human geography underpinning these neocosmopolitan distributions, and illustrate the extent to which these factors may have altered natural biogeographic patterns. We define the category pseudocosmopolitan to encompass taxa for which a broad distribution is determined (typically after molecular investigation) to reflect multiple, sometimes regionally endemic, lineages with uncertain taxonomic status; such species may remain cosmopolitan only so long as taxonomic uncertainty persists, after which they may splinter into multiple geographically restricted species. We discuss the methods employed to identify such species and to resolve both their taxonomic status and their biogeographic histories. We argue that recognizing these different types of cosmopolitanism, and the important role that invasion science has played in understanding them, is critically important for the future study of both historical and modern marine biogeography, ecology, and biodiversity.Entities:
Keywords: cosmopolitanism; eucosmopolitan; introduced species; invasion biology; marine biogeography; neocosmopolitan; provincial; pseudocosmopolitan
Year: 2018 PMID: 31019910 PMCID: PMC6475922 DOI: 10.3389/fmars.2018.00293
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Mar Sci ISSN: 2296-7745
FIGURE 1 |A framework for understanding the various types of cosmopolitanism. A species with an observed contemporary cosmopolitan distribution (the fictional Globalis cosmopolitanus, reported from multiple oceans) can fall into different categories depending on different trajectories of changing states of knowledge, represented by the five scenarios illustrated here. Red boxes indicate situations in which lineages are only identifiable by genetic means or otherwise remain unresolved either taxonomically or biogeographically; green boxes indicate situations in which lineages have binomial names and known biogeographic history. Stars identify those situations in which the number of introduced species is likely to be underestimated. Dashed arrows indicate the possibility that morphological and genetic data may not always result in new binomial names; similarly, genetic data alone may in rare cases be sufficient to erect new or resurrect old names. Curved dotted arrows reflect the possibility that newly identified species may still exhibit cosmopolitan distributions.
FIGURE 2 |(A) Shipping lanes of the “Maritime Silk Road,” starting in the fifth century B.C.E., connected the Red Sea to the South China Sea and beyond. From Lawler (2014); reprinted with permission from AAAS. (B) Spanish expeditionary routes and bases of exploration of the North and South Pacific Oceans over 240 years, touching virtually the entire Pacific rim from 1535 (to the Galapagos Islands) to 1775 (to the Alexander Archipelago, in what is now southeast Alaska). From https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:SpanishPacific.svg, open use without restriction through Wikimedia Commons (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0). (C) An advertisement for “Another cruise around the world” aboard the Samaria from January 26 to June 3, 1924 in “129 joyous days”: New York to the Mediterranean and Egypt through the Suez Canal to India, the Dutch East Indies and Straits Settlements (which included Singapore), Philippines, China, Japan, Hawaii, San Francisco, and then back to New York through the Panama Canal. From National Geographic Magazine 44(3), September 1923.
Examples of neocosmopolitan species fitting Scenario II from Figure 1.
| Species group | Probable Origin | Morphological evidence for conspecificity? | Molecular evidence for conspecificity? | Molecular markers used | Citation(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Unknown | ✓ | ✓ | nDNA (18S, 28S) | ||
| Unknown | ✓ | ✓ | nDNA (ITS) | ||
| Western Atlantic? | ✓ | ||||
| Indo-West Pacific | ✓ | ✓ | Not specified | ||
| Northwest Pacific | ✓ | ✓ | mtDNA (COI) | ||
| Western Atlantic | ✓ | ||||
| Northeast Pacific | ✓ | ✓ | mtDNA (COI), nDNA (EF1a) | ||
| Northwest Atlantic | ✓ | ✓ | mtDNA (COI), nDNA (msats) | ||
| Northwest Atlantic | ✓ | ||||
| Northeast Atlantic | ✓ | ✓ | mtDNA (COI), nDNA (msats) | ||
| Northwest Pacific | ✓ | ✓ | mtDNA (COI), nDNA (msats) | ||
| Northwest Pacific | ✓ | ✓ | mtDNA (COI) | ||
| Northwest Pacific | ✓ | ||||
| Indian Ocean? | ✓ | ||||
| North Pacific Ocean? | ✓ | ||||
| Indo-Pacific? | ✓ | ||||
| Unknown | ✓ | ||||
| Unknown | ✓ | ||||
| Northwest Pacific | ✓ | ✓ | cpDNA (msats and sequence markers) | ||
| Atlantic Ocean | ✓ | ✓ | mtDNA (COI), nDNA (ANT) | ||
| Northwest Pacific | ✓ | ✓ | mtDNA (COI), nDNA (tho2) | ||
| Northwest Atlantic | ✓ | ✓ | mtDNA (COI) | ||
| Northwest Pacific | ✓ | ✓ | mtDNA (COI) | ||
| Northwest Pacific | ✓ | ||||
| North Atlantic | ✓ | ||||
| unknown | ✓ | ||||
| Northwest Pacific | ✓ | ✓ | nDNA (msats) | ||
| Northwest Pacific | ✓ | ✓ | mtDNA (COI) | ||
| Northwest Pacific | ✓ | ✓ | mtDNA (COI, 16S, 12S), allozymes | ||
| Northwest Pacific | ✓ | ||||
| Northwest Pacific | ✓ | ✓ | mtDNA (intergenic spacers) | ||
| Northwest Pacific | ✓ | ✓ | mtDNA (cox1), nDNA (msats, RAPDs) | ||
| unknown | ✓ | ✓ | cpDNA (rbcL) | ||
Taxa are grouped and alphabetized at the phylum level; some phyla are broken into multiple groups at lower taxonomic levels. 33 species are listed across 9 marine phyla.
Examples of provincial native and regional introduced (Scenario III) and pseudocosmopolitan (Scenario IV) species.
| Species group | Scenario | Morphological evidence of multiple lineages? | Molecular evidence of multiple lineages? | Molecular markers used | Taxonomic resolution? | Resolution of native/introduced status? | Citation(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IV | ✓ | mtDN A (COI, 16S, 12S), nDNA (28S, 18S, ITS) | Resolution of “phylogenetic species” including named species as well as 3 new cryptic lineages | Unknown native and introduced ranges; “overwhelming evidence that these taxa are ubiquitous, opportunistic worms that have become common in several coastal sediments” | |||
| III | ✓ | ✓ | mtDNA (COI) | New name proposed for non-introduced lineage | Presumed native to northwest Pacific but introduced to Northwest Atlantic | ||
| IV | ✓ | mtDNA (COI) | Second, undescribed lineage observed in the native Mediterranean range | Known introduction to Southwest Atlantic, presumed native to Mediterranean | |||
| IV | ✓ | mtDNA (cytB), nDNA (iSSR) | Three lineages of F. enigmaticus identified, one with similarities to tropical | Cryptogenic (previously presumed native) status of | |||
| IV | ✓ | mtDNA (COI) | Second cryptic lineage of | Native range in Atlantic North America, introduced broadly; second undescribed lineage native to Gulf of Mexico and introduced to Black Sea | |||
| IV | ✓ | mtDNA (16S) | Three cryptic lineages identified | All three lineages introduced to Europe from North America | |||
| IV | ✓ | mtDNA (COI, 16S) | Two cryptic lineages identified; rough morphology suggests reference of Type A to Indo-Pacific material, Type B to Mediterranean | Broad global distribution of Type A and association with anthropogenic vectors leads to presumption of neocosmopolitan status, introduced in Atlantic from indo-Pacific; unresolved status of Type B | |||
| IV | ✓ | mtDNA (COI) | Three lettered ciades identified | All ciades presumed introduced to Pacific North America; unknown native source range, possibly NW Pacific or NW Atlantic | |||
| IV | ✓ | mtDNA (COI) | Two lettered ciades identified | Both ciades presumed introduced to North America from native range in northwestern Pacific | |||
| IV | ✓ | ntDNA (COI) | Unnamed Jassa sp. identified | Unclear status of multiple species in northwest Atlantic; one lineage cryptogenic Cordylophora caspiain northeast Pacific | |||
| IV | ✓ | mtDN A (COI, 16S) | Multiple lineages, including a second species introduced to US which remains unnamed | Native range presumed to be Pacific Central America, introduced populations in Caribbean and Northwest and Southwest Atlantic | |||
| IV | ✓ | mtDNA(16S), nDNA (12S, NaK) | Several highly divergent lettered lineages identified | Highest diversity observed in presumed native range in East and Southeast Asia; only one lineage has spread widely from that region | |||
| IV | ✓ | mtDNA (COI) | Multiple unnamed clades of S. terebrans, consistent with some observations of morphological differentiation | Limited sampling preclude strong inference of biogeography for different clades | |||
| IV | ✓ | mtDNA (COI) | Three unnamed clades in the northwest Pacific | Evidence for both ancient residence of some lineages and recent genetic mixing likely associated with human vectors; incomplete resolution of native/non-native status for all lineages | |||
| IV | ✓ | mtDNA (COI, 16S), nDNA (DYN, VDAC) | Three lettered types identified, corresponding to unnamed separate species based solely on genetic evidence | North American native ranges of all three types identified; two appear to have spread broadly by anthropogenic means | |||
| IV | ✓ | mtDNA (COI) | Two lettered clades of | Native origins of unnamed | |||
| IV | ✓ | nDNA (ITS) | Two incipient species of | Multiple non-native aquarium strains identified and sourced to Australia, but native range presumed to be pan-tropical; unclear if native biogeography differs between unnamed lineages | |||
| Ill | ✓ | ✓ | cpDNA (rbcL) | Identification of lineages with affinities to three different genera, morphological data alone insufficient to distinguish many species | At least five species likely introduced to New Zealand, others likely indigenous | ||
| IV | ✓ | mtDNA (COI) | Five lettered clades identified; clade A referred to B. schlosseri after designation and description of a Mediterranean neotype | Evidence of a clade native to the northwest Atlantic, where the species was previously described as introduced; evidence also of bi-directional introductions across the Atlantic | |||
| III | ✓ | ✓ | nDNA (ITS, Hox introns/exons), mtDNA (COI), microsateHites, mtDNA gene order | Two lettered types assigned to C. intestinal is and C. robusta based on morphological and genetic evidence as well as cross-breeding experiments | Neocosmopolitan distributions of C. robusta native to east Asia introduced to Australia/New Zealand, Europe, South Africa and South and North America, and of C. intestinal is native to Europe and introduced to China, | ||
| IV | ✓ | mtDNA (COI) | Four lettered clades of | Genetic data insufficient to identify native/introduced ranges for various clades | |||
| III | ✓ | ✓ | mtDNA (cox B), nDNA (18S) | Genetic clades referred to existing names | Some presumed non-native occurrences of | ||
| IV | ✓ | mtDNA (COI), nDNA (18S, ATP synthase subunit alpha, Adenine Nucleotide Transporter) | Five distinct initially unnamed “species” identified from global material referred to | Resolved lineages include endemic, introduced regional, and neocosmopolitan species | |||
| IV | ✓ | mtDNA (COI) | One lineage of | Hypothesized native range in northwest Pacific center of diversity | |||
| IV | ✓ | mtDNA (ND2, ND6), nDNA (SRP) | Genetic evidence for multiple unnamed lineages; “unresolved taxonomy likely plays a role in the broad reports of spread for C. riisei” | Introduction to Hawaii from Caribbean source contradicted by genetic data, but non-native status in Hawaii confirmed by historical evidence; origins of various lineages remain unclear | |||
| IV | ✓ | nDNA (28S), mtDNA (16S, COI) | Four numbered and lettered clades identified; possible reference of two major clades to | Poor sampling in presumed native range precludes strong inference of native range, but almost certainly introduced to North America | |||
| IV | ✓ | mtDNA (COI) | Two widely divergent unnamed clades | Genetic data consistent with multiple possible biogeographic scenarios | |||
| IV | ✓ | mtDNA (16S) | Multiple divergent unnamed lineages, three in Hawaii | Three lineages in Hawaii rather than one introduced species; two likely introduced, one either introduced or eucosmopolitan; native sources of lineages unclear | |||
| IV | ✓ | mtDNA (COI) | Multiple highly diverged lineages as well as shared hapiotypes between putative named sister species suggest “systematic confusion”; molecular support for six species | Multiple introductions to Hawaii suggested, but native/introduced status for all lineages/species unclear | |||
| IV | ✓ | mtDNA (COI), nDNA (LYS) | Evidence for two divergent lettered clades | Lineages have non-overlapping distributions, one indo-Pacific and the other in the Red Sea and Persian Gulf, likely introduced to Mediterranean via the Suez Canal | |||
| IV | ✓ | mtDNA (COI) | Two divergent lettered lineages | Atlantic lineage A highly diverged from Pacific specimens, likely ancestral isolation by formation of isthmus of Panama; Atlantic lineage B more widespread and likely recently introduced from Pacific | |||
| III | ✓ | ✓ | mtDNA (COI), nDNA (ITS) | Two distinct genetic lineages with statistically distinguishable morphotypes identified | Precise geographical origin of lineages (all presumed Asian) remains unknown | ||
| III | ✓ | ✓ | mtDNA (16S), allozymes | Worldwide | |||
| IV | ✓ | nDNA(18S, ITS) | Genetic data separate two species, | ||||
| IV | ✓ | mtDNA (COI, Atp8), nDNA (28S) | Evidence for four morphologically indistinct species | Evidence of indigenous status for multiple clades, but possibility that some may be introduced | |||
| IV | ✓ | mtDN A (COI, COlex, rnl), nDNA(18S) | Morphologically indistinguishable specimens can be highly diverged, as many as 12 geographically restricted subclades | Evidence of contemporary introduction of one clade from Caribbean to Hawaii, but detailed invasion history unclear | |||
| IV | ✓ | nDNA (28S), cpDNA (rbcL), mtDNA (intergenic spacer) | Five lineages identified for | New | |||
| IV | ✓ | mtDNA (COI), nDNA(ITS), and cpDNA(rbcL) | Identification of two species and resurrection of a third based solely on genetic data | ||||
Taxa are grouped and alphabetized at the phylum level; some phyla are broken into multiple groups at lower taxonomic levels. 38 total species groups are listed across 11 marine phyla.
FIGURE 3 |Geographic distributions of the multiple genetic lineages of the ascidian Diplosoma listerianum, from (Perez-Portela et al., 2013). (A) Global distributions of clades identified based on analysis of COI sequences. Clade A is widely dispersed, likely exhibiting a neocosmopolitan distribution, Clade B is cryptogenic, and Clades C and D display limited distributions consistent with provincial lineages. (B) Phylogenetic analysis revealing dramatic divergence between clades; interclade divergence was as great as 20% sequence dissimilarity at the COI locus, consistent with independent species status. Figures reprinted under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International license.
FIGURE 4 |Genetic, morphological, and reciprocal crossing evidence for species-level divergence between two lineages of the ascidian Ciona intestinalis (Type A and Type B). Figures are relabeled with the new names for these lineages, Type A = C. robusta and Type B = C. intestinalis. (A) Median-joining haplotype network based on COX3-ND1 sequences, showing 70 mutational steps between the two lineages; colors indicate geographic affinities, which are not shown (Bouchemousse et al., 2016). (B) Differences in gene order on the mitochondrial genomes of C. intestinalis, C. robusta, and C. savigni (Iannelli et al., 2007). (C) Larval morphology of the two species; a discriminant function obtained from larval measurements correctly classified >93% of larvae (Pennati et al., 2015). (D) Fertilization rate of heterospecific crosses between C. intestinalis, C. roulei, and C. robusta; homospecific crosses resulted in >80% fertilization rates for all species, but heterospecific crosses with C. robusta as the maternal lineage (listed first) showed extremely low success rates (Malfant et al., 2018). (A,B,D) Reprinted under the Creative Commons license (Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)); (C) reprinted with permission.
| Term | Scenario (S), from | Definition |
|---|---|---|
| Eucosmopolitan | S-I | Native species whose broad distribution in multiple oceans is attributed to natural processes acting over eco-evolutionary timescales |
| Neocosmopolitan | S-II | Introduced species that have achieved a widespread distribution in multiple oceans through anthropogenic (human-mediated) dispersal; an interoceanic invasion |
| Provincial | S-III | Native species either found nowhere else (endemic to, or in part of, a single province) or broadly distributed (indigenous; in one or more contiguous provinces); provinces as defined by ( |
| Introduced Regional | S-III | A species introduced outside of its native range but in the same ocean; an intraoceanic invasion |
| Pseudocosmopolitan | S-IV | A taxon composed of two or more lineages (which may be native, introduced, or cryptogenic) but retaining a single binomial name with an illusory “cosmopolitan” biogeographic status |
| • Investment in integrated taxonomic expertise, with emphasis on skillsets bridging morphological and genetic data generation and analysis |
| • The development of novel criteria, and further elucidation of existing guidelines, for assignment of neocosmopolitan status based on history, distribution, association with anthropogenic vectors of introduction, etc. |
| • Rigorous investigation of presumed neocosmopolitan species with suspicious distributions bridging cold temperate and deep tropical latitudes |
| • Resolution of known pseudocosmopolitan taxa, replacing unnamed lineages with accepted binomials attached to diagnostic criteria accessible via morphological and/or genetic analysis |
| • Investigation of methods for assigning species names to lineages determined solely by multilocus genetic evidence coupled with development of formally accepted protocols for making such assignments (including development of standard protocols for incorporating genetic evidence for divergent evolutionary lineages into widely accessible taxonomic descriptions) |
| • Continued exploration of unresolved cosmopolitan species, with the aim of resolving taxonomic and biogeographic history sufficiently to assign provincial, neocosmopolitan, or eucosmopolitan status. |