Journal article

Recurrent camouflaged invasions and dispersal of an Asian freshwater gastropod in tropical Africa


Authors listVan Bocxlaer, B; Clewing, C; Etimosundja, JPM; Kankonda, A; Ndeo, OW; Albrecht, C

Publication year2015

Pages33-

JournalBMC Evolutionary Biology

Volume number15

ISSN1471-2148

Open access statusGold

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1186/s12862-015-0296-2

PublisherBioMed Central


Abstract
Background: Non-indigenous taxa currently represent a large fraction of the species and biomass of freshwater ecosystems. The accumulation of invasive taxa in combination with other stressors in these ecosystems may alter the habitats to which native taxa are adapted, which could elicit evolutionary changes in native populations and their ecological interactions. Assessing ecological and evolutionary consequences of invasions simultaneously may therefore be the most effective approach to study taxa with complex invasion histories. Here we apply such an integrated approach to the cerithioid gastropod Melanoides tuberculata, a model system in invasion biology.Results: Molecular phylogenetics and ancestral range reconstructions allowed us to identify several independent Asian invasions in Lakes Malawi and Tanganyika, the Congo River, Nigeria and Cameroon. Some invasive M. tuberculata populations display much variation in shell morphology, and overlap in morphospace with M. tuberculata populations native to Africa. Experiments confirmed great ecophenotyic plasticity in some invasive populations, which, in combination with the overlap in disparity with native populations, masks invaders and their dispersal through Africa. Finally, the results of geographic modeling indicate that cryptic M. tuberculata invasions occurred primarily in densely populated areas.Conclusions: We reveal the continental nature of invasions of Asian M. tuberculata to Africa. Several of the affected ecosystems have high endemicity in Cerithioidea: Lake Tanganyika has an unparalleled diversity in freshwater cerithioids (> 10 endemic genera) and the Congo Basin and Lake Malawi are home to the two largest endemic species clusters of Melanoides in Africa (similar to 12 and similar to 8 species, respectively). Cerithioids perform ecologically important functions in the benthic ecosystems of African freshwaters, but invaders and ecosystem change pose risks to their native diversity. We draw suggestions for more effective conservation strategies from our integrated approach.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleVan Bocxlaer, B., Clewing, C., Etimosundja, J., Kankonda, A., Ndeo, O. and Albrecht, C. (2015) Recurrent camouflaged invasions and dispersal of an Asian freshwater gastropod in tropical Africa, BMC Evolutionary Biology, 15, p. 33. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12862-015-0296-2

APA Citation styleVan Bocxlaer, B., Clewing, C., Etimosundja, J., Kankonda, A., Ndeo, O., & Albrecht, C. (2015). Recurrent camouflaged invasions and dispersal of an Asian freshwater gastropod in tropical Africa. BMC Evolutionary Biology. 15, 33. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12862-015-0296-2



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