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Dive into the research topics where Gerardo I. Zardi is active.

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Featured researches published by Gerardo I. Zardi.


BMC Biology | 2013

Shift happens: trailing edge contraction associated with recent warming trends threatens a distinct genetic lineage in the marine macroalga Fucus vesiculosus

Katy R. Nicastro; Gerardo I. Zardi; Sara Teixeira; João Neiva; Ester A. Serrão; Gareth A. Pearson

BackgroundSignificant effects of recent global climate change have already been observed in a variety of ecosystems, with evidence for shifts in species ranges, but rarely have such consequences been related to the changes in the species genetic pool. The stretch of Atlantic coast between North Africa and North Iberia is ideal for studying the relationship between species distribution and climate change as it includes the distributional limits of a considerable number of both cold- and warm-water species.We compared temporal changes in distribution of the canopy-forming alga Fucus vesiculosus with historical sea surface temperature (SST) patterns to draw links between range shifts and contemporary climate change. Moreover, we genetically characterized with microsatellite markers previously sampled extinct and extant populations in order to estimate resulting cryptic genetic erosion.ResultsOver the past 30 years, a geographic contraction of the southern range edge of this species has occurred, with a northward latitudinal shift of approximately 1,250 km. Additionally, a more restricted distributional decline was recorded in the Bay of Biscay. Coastal SST warming data over the last three decades revealed a significant increase in temperature along most of the studied coastline, averaging 0.214°C/decade. Importantly, the analysis of existing and extinct population samples clearly distinguished two genetically different groups, a northern and a southern clade. Because of the range contraction, the southern group is currently represented by very few extant populations. This southern edge range shift is thus causing the loss of a distinct component of the species genetic background.ConclusionsWe reveal a climate-correlated diversity loss below the species level, a process that could render the species more vulnerable to future environmental changes and affect its evolutionary potential. This is a remarkable case of genetic uniqueness of a vanishing cryptic genetic clade (southern clade).


PLOS ONE | 2011

Adaptive Traits Are Maintained on Steep Selective Gradients despite Gene Flow and Hybridization in the Intertidal Zone

Gerardo I. Zardi; Katy R. Nicastro; Fernando Cánovas; Joana F. Costa; Ester A. Serrão; Gareth A. Pearson

Gene flow among hybridizing species with incomplete reproductive barriers blurs species boundaries, while selection under heterogeneous local ecological conditions or along strong gradients may counteract this tendency. Congeneric, externally-fertilizing fucoid brown algae occur as distinct morphotypes along intertidal exposure gradients despite gene flow. Combining analyses of genetic and phenotypic traits, we investigate the potential for physiological resilience to emersion stressors to act as an isolating mechanism in the face of gene flow. Along vertical exposure gradients in the intertidal zone of Northern Portugal and Northwest France, the mid-low shore species Fucus vesiculosus, the upper shore species Fucus spiralis, and an intermediate distinctive morphotype of F. spiralis var. platycarpus were morphologically characterized. Two diagnostic microsatellite loci recovered 3 genetic clusters consistent with prior morphological assignment. Phylogenetic analysis based on single nucleotide polymorphisms in 14 protein coding regions unambiguously resolved 3 clades; sympatric F. vesiculosus, F. spiralis, and the allopatric (in southern Iberia) population of F. spiralis var. platycarpus. In contrast, the sympatric F. spiralis var. platycarpus (from Northern Portugal) was distributed across the 3 clades, strongly suggesting hybridization/introgression with both other entities. Common garden experiments showed that physiological resilience following exposure to desiccation/heat stress differed significantly between the 3 sympatric genetic taxa; consistent with their respective vertical distribution on steep environmental clines in exposure time. Phylogenetic analyses indicate that F. spiralis var. platycarpus is a distinct entity in allopatry, but that extensive gene flow occurs with both higher and lower shore species in sympatry. Experimental results suggest that strong selection on physiological traits across steep intertidal exposure gradients acts to maintain the 3 distinct genetic and morphological taxa within their preferred vertical distribution ranges. On the strength of distributional, genetic, physiological and morphological differences, we propose elevation of F. spiralis var. platycarpus from variety to species level, as F. guiryi.


BMC Ecology | 2010

The role of gaping behaviour in habitat partitioning between coexisting intertidal mussels

Katy R. Nicastro; Gerardo I. Zardi; Christopher D. McQuaid; Linda L. Stephens; Sarah E. Radloff

BackgroundEnvironmental heterogeneity plays a major role in invasion and coexistence dynamics. Habitat segregation between introduced species and their native competitors is usually described in terms of different physiological and behavioural abilities. However little attention has been paid to the effects of behaviour in habitat partitioning among invertebrates, partially because their behavioural repertoires, especially marine benthic taxa, are extremely limited. This study investigates the effect of gaping behaviour on habitat segregation of the two dominant mussel species living in South Africa, the invasive Mytilus galloprovincialis and the indigenous Perna perna. These two species show partial habitat segregation on the south coast of South Africa, the lower and upper areas of the mussel zone are dominated by P. perna and M. galloprovincialis respectively, with overlap in the middle zone. During emergence, intertidal mussels will either keep the valves closed, minimizing water loss and undergoing anaerobic metabolism, or will periodically open the valves maintaining a more efficient aerobic metabolism but increasing the risk of desiccation.ResultsOur results show that, when air exposed, the two species adopt clearly different behaviours. M. galloprovincialis keeps the shell valves closed, while P. perna periodically gapes. Gaping behaviour increased water loss in the indigenous species, and consequently the risk of desiccation. The indigenous species expressed significantly higher levels of stress protein (Hsp70) than M. galloprovincialis under field conditions and suffered significantly higher mortality rates when exposed to air in the laboratory. In general, no intra-specific differences were observed in relation to intertidal height. The absence of gaping minimises water loss but exposes the invasive species to other stresses, probably related to anoxic respiration.ConclusionsGaping affects tolerance to desiccation, thus influencing the vertical zonation of the two species. Valve closure exposes the invasive species to higher stress and associated energy demands, but it minimizes water loss, allowing this species to dominate the upper mussel zone, where the gaping indigenous P. perna cannot survive. Thus even very simple behaviour can influence the outcome of interactions between indigenous and invasive species.


Oecologia | 2011

The combination of selection and dispersal helps explain genetic structure in intertidal mussels

Gerardo I. Zardi; Katy R. Nicastro; Christopher D. McQuaid; L Hancke; Brian Helmuth

Understanding patterns of gene flow, selection and genetic diversity within and among populations is a critical element of predicting how long-term changes in environmental conditions are likely to affect species distribution. The intertidal mussel Perna perna consists of two distinct genetic lineages in South Africa, but the mechanisms maintaining these lineages remains obscure. We used regional oceanography and lineage-specific responses to environmental conditions as proxies for gene flow and local selection, respectively, to test how these mechanisms could shape population genetic structure. Laboratory experiments supported the field findings that mussels on the east coast (eastern lineage) are physiologically more tolerant of sand inundation and high temperatures than those on the south coast (western lineage). Temperature loggers mimicking mussel body temperatures revealed that mussels experience higher body temperatures during aerial exposure on the subtropical east coast than on the temperate south coast. Translocations showed that, on the east coast, the western lineage suffered higher mortality rates than local individuals, while on the south coast, mortality rates did not differ significantly between the lineages. Nearshore drogues showed remarkably little overlap between the trajectories of drifters released off the south coast and those released off the east coast. Physiological tolerances can thus explain the exclusion of western individuals from the east coast, but they cannot explain the exclusion of the eastern lineage from the south coast. In contrast, however, ocean dynamics may limit larval dispersal between the two lineages, helping to explain the absence of eastern individuals from the south coast. We emphasise the importance of a multidisciplinary approach in a macro-ecological context to understand fully the mechanisms promoting evolutionary divergence between genetic entities. Our results suggest that phylogeographic patterns of Perna perna may be maintained by a combination of local conditions and the isolating effect of the Agulhas Current that reduces gene exchange.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Love Thy Neighbour: Group Properties of Gaping Behaviour in Mussel Aggregations

Katy R. Nicastro; Gerardo I. Zardi; Christopher D. McQuaid; Gareth A. Pearson; Ester A. Serrão

By associating closely with others to form a group, an animal can benefit from a number of advantages including reduced risk of predation, amelioration of environmental conditions, and increased reproductive success, but at the price of reduced resources. Although made up of individual members, an aggregation often displays novel effects that do not manifest at the level of the individual organism. Here we show that very simple behaviour in intertidal mussels shows new effects in dense aggregations but not in isolated individuals. Perna perna and Mytilus galloprovincialis are gaping (periodic valve movement during emersion) and non-gaping mussels respectively. P. perna gaping behaviour had no effect on body temperatures of isolated individuals, while it led to increased humidity and decreased temperatures in dense groups (beds). Gaping resulted in cooler body temperatures for P. perna than M. galloprovincialis when in aggregations, while solitary individuals exhibited the highest temperatures. Gradients of increasing body temperature were detected from the center to edges of beds, but M. galloprovincialis at the edge had the same temperature as isolated individuals. Furthermore, a field study showed that during periods of severe heat stress, mortality rates of mussels within beds of the gaping P. perna were lower than those of isolated individuals or within beds of M. galloprovincialis, highlighting the determinant role of gaping on fitness and group functioning. We demonstrate that new effects of very simple individual behaviour lead to amelioration of abiotic conditions at the aggregation level and that these effects increase mussel resistance to thermal stress.


Biological Invasions | 2010

Differential reproductive investment, attachment strength and mortality of invasive and indigenous mussels across heterogeneous environments

Katy R. Nicastro; Gerardo I. Zardi; Christopher D. McQuaid

Environmental heterogeneity challenges both indigenous species and invaders and can play a defining role in the dynamics of their interactions. We compare bay and open coast habitats to show how environmental heterogeneity and seasonality affect survival and physiological performances of invasive (Mytilus galloprovincialis) and indigenous (Perna perna) intertidal mussels. P. perna had significantly higher attachment strength than M. galloprovincialis. Attachment was strongly correlated with hydrodynamic stress and was lower for both species in bays. Both species had a major spawning event when wave action was weakest. In bays, there was no correlation between gonad index (GI) and attachment strength for either species, but on the open coast GI was negatively correlated with attachment. In bays, maximum GI of M. galloprovincialis was 64% higher than for P. perna, while on the open coast values did not differ between the two. Thus, on the open coast, both species invest more energy in attachment but P. perna can accommodate energetic demands of increased byssal production without altering gonad production, while M. galloprovincialis cannot. Mortality was significantly correlated to sand stress, while the correlation with wave action was very weak in bays and non-significant on the open coast probably because sand stress peaked during periods of low wave action. The success of the invader and thus the outcomes of its interaction with the indigenous species are governed by habitat-to-habitat variability. In this case the invasive species is likely to prove a weaker competitor on the more stressful and energetically demanding open coast.


PLOS ONE | 2009

Effects of Endolithic Parasitism on Invasive and Indigenous Mussels in a Variable Physical Environment

Gerardo I. Zardi; Katy R. Nicastro; Christopher D. McQuaid; Marcos Gektidis

Biotic stress may operate in concert with physical environmental conditions to limit or facilitate invasion processes while altering competitive interactions between invaders and native species. Here, we examine how endolithic parasitism of an invasive and an indigenous mussel species acts in synergy with abiotic conditions of the habitat. Our results show that the invasive Mytilus galloprovincialis is more infested than the native Perna perna and this difference is probably due to the greater thickness of the protective outer-layer of the shell of the indigenous species. Higher abrasion due to waves on the open coast could account for dissimilarities in degree of infestation between bays and the more wave-exposed open coast. Also micro-scale variations of light affected the level of endolithic parasitism, which was more intense at non-shaded sites. The higher levels of endolithic parasitism in Mytilus mirrored greater mortality rates attributed to parasitism in this species. Condition index, attachment strength and shell strength of both species were negatively affected by the parasites suggesting an energy trade-off between the need to repair the damaged shell and the other physiological parameters. We suggest that, because it has a lower attachment strength and a thinner shell, the invasiveness of M. galloprovincialis will be limited at sun and wave exposed locations where endolithic activity, shell scouring and risk of dislodgement are high. These results underline the crucial role of physical environment in regulating biotic stress, and how these physical-biological interactions may explain site-to-site variability of competitive balances between invasive and indigenous species.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Oceanographic Conditions Limit the Spread of a Marine Invader along Southern African Shores.

Jorge Assis; Mirta Zupan; Katy R. Nicastro; Gerardo I. Zardi; Christopher D. McQuaid; Ester A. Serrão

Invasive species can affect the function and structure of natural ecological communities, hence understanding and predicting their potential for spreading is a major ecological challenge. Once established in a new region, the spread of invasive species is largely controlled by their dispersal capacity, local environmental conditions and species interactions. The mussel Mytilus galloprovincialis is native to the Mediterranean and is the most successful marine invader in southern Africa. Its distribution there has expanded rapidly and extensively since the 1970s, however, over the last decade its spread has ceased. In this study, we coupled broad scale field surveys, Ecological Niche Modelling (ENM) and Lagrangian Particle Simulations (LPS) to assess the current invaded distribution of M. galloprovincialis in southern Africa and to evaluate what prevents further spread of this species. Results showed that all environmentally suitable habitats in southern Africa have been occupied by the species. This includes rocky shores between Rocky Point in Namibia and East London in South Africa (approx. 2800 km) and these limits coincide with the steep transitions between cool-temperate and subtropical-warmer climates, on both west and southeast African coasts. On the west coast, simulations of drifting larvae almost entirely followed the northward and offshore direction of the Benguela current, creating a clear dispersal barrier by advecting larvae away from the coast. On the southeast coast, nearshore currents give larvae the potential to move eastwards, against the prevalent Agulhas current and beyond the present distributional limit, however environmental conditions prevent the establishment of the species. The transition between the cooler and warmer water regimes is therefore the main factor limiting the northern spread on the southeast coast; however, biotic interactions with native fauna may also play an important role.


Ecology and Evolution | 2014

Wider sampling reveals a non-sister relationship for geographically contiguous lineages of a marine mussel

Regina L. Cunha; Katy R. Nicastro; Joana F. Costa; Christopher D. McQuaid; Ester A. Serrão; Gerardo I. Zardi

The accuracy of phylogenetic inference can be significantly improved by the addition of more taxa and by increasing the spatial coverage of sampling. In previous studies, the brown mussel Perna perna showed a sister–lineage relationship between eastern and western individuals contiguously distributed along the South African coastline. We used mitochondrial (COI) and nuclear (ITS) sequence data to further analyze phylogeographic patterns within P. perna. Significant expansion of the geographical coverage revealed an unexpected pattern. The western South African lineage shared the most recent common ancestor (MRCA) with specimens from Angola, Venezuela, and Namibia, whereas eastern South African specimens and Mozambique grouped together, indicating a non-sister relationship for the two South African lineages. Two plausible biogeographic scenarios to explain their origin were both supported by the hypotheses-testing analysis. One includes an Indo-Pacific origin for P. perna, dispersal into the Mediterranean and Atlantic through the Tethys seaway, followed by recent secondary contact after southward expansion of the western and eastern South African lineages. The other scenario (Out of South Africa) suggests an ancient vicariant divergence of the two lineages followed by their northward expansion. Nevertheless, the “Out of South Africa” hypothesis would require a more ancient divergence between the two lineages. Instead, our estimates indicated that they diverged very recently (310 kyr), providing a better support for an Indo-Pacific origin of the two South African lineages. The arrival of the MRCA of P. perna in Brazil was estimated at 10 [0–40] kyr. Thus, the hypothesis of a recent introduction in Brazil through hull fouling in wooden vessels involved in the transatlantic itineraries of the slave trade did not receive strong support, but given the range for this estimate, it could not be discarded. Wider geographic sampling of marine organisms shows that lineages with contiguous distributions need not share a common ancestry.


Biological Invasions | 2013

Comparison of phototrophic shell-degrading endoliths in invasive and native populations of the intertidal mussel Mytilus galloprovincialis

Nathalie Marquet; Katy R. Nicastro; Marcos Gektidis; Christopher D. McQuaid; Gareth A. Pearson; Ester A. Serrão; Gerardo I. Zardi

The intertidal mussel Mytilus galloprovincialis is a successful invader worldwide. Since its accidental introduction onto the South African west coast in the late 1970s, it has become the most successful marine invasive species in South Africa. One possible explanation for this phenomenon is that M. galloprovincialis suffers less from phototrophic shell-degrading endoliths in its invasive than in its native range. We assessed photoautotrophic endolithic pressure on M. galloprovincialis in native (Portugal) and invasive (South Africa) ranges. Invasive populations were more heavily infested than native populations. In Portugal, only the biggest/oldest mussels displayed endolithic erosion of the shell and the incidence of infestation was greater at higher shore levels where more prolonged exposure to light enhances endolith photosynthesis. In South Africa, even the smallest size classes of mussels were heavily infested throughout the shore. In Portugal, endolithic-induced mortality was observed at only one location, while in South Africa it occurred at all locations and at significantly higher rates than in Portugal. Important sub-lethal effects were detected in infested native mussels, confirming previous studies of invasive populations and suggesting an energy trade-off between shell repair and other physiological constraints. We observed a positive relationship between infestation rates and barnacle colonization on mussel shells, suggesting possible facilitation of barnacle settlement/survival by shell-boring pathogens. Identification of endoliths revealed common species between regions. However, two species were unique in the invasive range while another was unique in the native region. Different levels of endolithic infestation in the invasive and the native range were not explained by the effect of major environmental determinants (Photosynthetically Available Radiation and wave height). The results reject our initial hypothesis, indicating that invasion success of M. galloprovincialis is not simply explained by escape from its natural enemies but results from complex interactions between characteristics of the invaded community and properties of the invader.

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Rita Jacinto

University of the Algarve

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Joana F. Costa

University of the Algarve

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Laurent Seuront

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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