Project: Connecting genetic diversity to ecosystem functioning: links between genetic diversity, relatedness and trait variation in a seagrass community

Acronym/Short Name:Genetic Div to Ecosys Functioning
Project Duration:2012-09 - 2016-08

Description

There is growing evidence that genetic variation within and among populations of key species plays an important role in marine ecosystem processes. Several experiments provide compelling evidence that the number of genotypes in an assemblage (genotypic richness) can influence critical ecosystem functions including productivity, resistance to disturbance and invasion or colonization success. However, these studies use only the number of genotypes as a measure of genetic diversity. Recent analyses of species diversity experiments show that phylogenetic diversity may be a more reliable predictor of ecosystem functioning than simply the number of species. However, such approaches have not yet been applied to understanding the effects of genetics on ecosystem functioning. While genetic relatedness within a species holds the potential to predict the outcome of intraspecific interactions, and the functioning of ecosystems that depend on those species, we currently have few data to assess the shape or strength of this relationship. The investigators will build on their own previous work, and that of others, in eelgrass (Zostera marina) ecosystems showing strong effects of genotypic richness on a spectrum of critical ecosystem processes. The investigators will ask whether genotypic richness, or - as in studies at the level of species diversity - genetic relatedness/distance better predicts ecosystem functioning? If genetic relatedness measures are better predictors, then what mechanisms underlie this relationship? Can genetic relatedness predict ecological relatedness?

Although the current focus is on eelgrass, the research should be applicable to many systems. The project will assess the relationship between genetic relatedness and phenotypic distinctiveness of a key marine foundation species and use manipulative experiments to test the relative importance of the number of genotypes in an assemblage vs. their genetic relatedness and trait diversity for ecosystem functioning. Specifically, experiments will:
(1) characterize the relationship between genetic relatedness and trait similarity among individual genotypes of eelgrass, including responses to experimental warming;
(2) compare the effects of genetic relatedness and trait similarity among genotypes on the outcome of intraspecific competitive interactions; and
(3) test the relative effect of genetic relatedness vs. number of genotypes of eelgrass on the growth of eelgrass, its associated ecosystem functions it (e.g., primary production, nutrient dynamics, trophic transfer, habitat provision, and detrital production and decomposition).

Seagrass ecosystems provide important services to coastal regions including primary production, nutrient cycling, habitat for fisheries species, and erosion control. Previous studies have shown these services can be compromised by reduction in the numbers of species of grazers or genotypes, but this study will allow a more predictive approach to diversity loss by integrating the effects of multiple components of diversity and clarifying the extent to which diversity effects can be predicted by the genetic or ecological uniqueness of component genotypes.


DatasetLatest Version DateCurrent State
Eelgrass (Zostera marina) physiological and morphological traits measured between March of 2013 and August of 2014 using eelgrass collected in Bodega Bay, CA in May of 20122018-06-28Final no updates expected
Site information for eelgrass (Zostera marina) transects in Bodega Bay, CA in May of 20122018-06-12Final no updates expected
Eelgrass (Zostera marina) diversity metrics from 15-month field experiment in Bodega Bay, CA starting in the summer of 20132018-01-31Final no updates expected
Feeding trials: Effects of diversity in feeding trials, conducted at Bodgea Marine Laboratory, using detritus from eelgrass (Zostera marina) genotypes (clones) as a food source and either one or a combination of invertebrate grazers2017-09-15Final no updates expected
Invertebrate survival: Invertebrate survival rates from feeding experiments, conducted at Bodega Marine Laboratory, where food sources (eelgrass (Zostera marina) genotypes) were varied2017-09-15Final no updates expected
Biodiversity experiments: Effects of diversity in feeding trials, conducted at Bodgea Marine Laboratory, using detritus from eelgrass (Zostera marina) genotypes (clones) as a food source and either one or a combination of invertebrate grazers2017-09-15Final no updates expected
A re-sampling of historical population genetic surveys of Zostera marina from Bodega, Tomales, and San Francisco Bays USA; study performed at Bodega Marine Laboratory in 2014-152016-10-12Final no updates expected
Results from experiment examining Zostera marina genotype response to warming from the Bodega Marine Laboratory2016-05-17Final no updates expected

People

Principal Investigator: John J. Stachowicz
University of California-Davis (UC Davis)

Co-Principal Investigator: Richard K. Grosberg
University of California-Davis (UC Davis)

Co-Principal Investigator: Susan L. Williams
University of California - Davis: Bodega Marine Laboratory (UC Davis-BML)

Contact: John J. Stachowicz
University of California-Davis (UC Davis)


Data Management Plan

DMP_Stachowicz_et_al_OCE-1234345.pdf (70.97 KB)
02/09/2025