Robert M. Jennings
University of Massachusetts Amherst
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Featured researches published by Robert M. Jennings.
Molecular Ecology | 2011
Ron J. Etter; Elizabeth E. Boyle; Amanda Glazier; Robert M. Jennings; Ediane Dutra; Mike R. Chase
The deep sea is a vast and essentially continuous environment with few obvious barriers to gene flow. How populations diverge and new species form in this remote ecosystem is poorly understood. Phylogeographical analyses have begun to provide some insight into evolutionary processes at bathyal depths (<3000 m), but much less is known about evolution in the more extensive abyssal regions (>3000 m). Here, we quantify geographical and bathymetric patterns of genetic variation (16S rRNA mitochondrial gene) in the protobranch bivalve Ledella ultima, which is one of the most abundant abyssal protobranchs in the Atlantic with a broad bathymetric and geographical distribution. We found virtually no genetic divergence within basins and only modest divergence among eight Atlantic basins. Levels of population divergence among basins were related to geographical distance and were greater in the South Atlantic than in the North Atlantic. Ocean‐wide patterns of genetic variation indicate basin‐wide divergence that exceeds what others have found for abyssal organisms, but considerably less than bathyal protobranchs across similar geographical scales. Populations on either side of the Mid‐Atlantic Ridge in the North Atlantic differed, suggesting the Ridge might impede gene flow at abyssal depths. Our results indicate that abyssal populations might be quite large (cosmopolitan), exhibit only modest genetic structure and probably provide little potential for the formation of new species.
Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution | 2013
Prashant P. Sharma; John D. Zardus; Elizabeth E. Boyle; Vanessa L. González; Robert M. Jennings; Erin McIntyre; Ward C. Wheeler; Ron J. Etter; Gonzalo Giribet
A molecular phylogeny of Protobranchia, the subclass of bivalve mollusks sister to the remaining Bivalvia, has long proven elusive, because many constituent lineages are deep-sea endemics, which creates methodological challenges for collecting and preserving genetic material. We obtained 74 representatives of all 12 extant protobranch families and investigated the internal phylogeny of this group using sequence data from five molecular loci (16S rRNA, 18S rRNA, 28S rRNA, cytochrome c oxidase subunit I, and histone H3). Model-based and dynamic homology parsimony approaches to phylogenetic reconstruction unanimously supported four major clades of Protobranchia, irrespective of treatment of hypervariable regions in the nuclear ribosomal genes 18S rRNA and 28S rRNA. These four clades correspond to the superfamilies Nuculoidea (excluding Sareptidae), Nuculanoidea (including Sareptidae), Solemyoidea, and Manzanelloidea. Salient aspects of the phylogeny include (1) support for the placement of the family Sareptidae with Nuculanoidea; (2) the non-monophyly of the order Solemyida (Solemyidae+Nucinellidae); (3) and the non-monophyly of most nuculoid and nuculanoid genera and families. In light of this first family-level phylogeny of Protobranchia, we present a revised classification of the group. Estimation of divergence times in concert with analyses of diversification rates demonstrate the signature of the end-Permian mass extinction in the phylogeny of extant protobranchs.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Robert M. Jennings; Ron J. Etter; Lynn Ficarra
Ecological speciation probably plays a more prominent role in diversification than previously thought, particularly in marine ecosystems where dispersal potential is great and where few obvious barriers to gene flow exist. This may be especially true in the deep sea where allopatric speciation seems insufficient to account for the rich and largely endemic fauna. Ecologically driven population differentiation and speciation are likely to be most prevalent along environmental gradients, such as those attending changes in depth. We quantified patterns of genetic variation along a depth gradient (1600-3800m) in the western North Atlantic for a protobranch bivalve ( Nuculaatacellana ) to test for population divergence. Multilocus analyses indicated a sharp discontinuity across a narrow depth range, with extremely low gene flow inferred between shallow and deep populations for thousands of generations. Phylogeographical discordance occurred between nuclear and mitochondrial loci as might be expected during the early stages of species formation. Because the geographic distance between divergent populations is small and no obvious dispersal barriers exist in this region, we suggest the divergence might reflect ecologically driven selection mediated by environmental correlates of the depth gradient. As inferred for numerous shallow-water species, environmental gradients that parallel changes in depth may play a key role in the genesis and adaptive radiation of the deep-water fauna.
PLOS ONE | 2010
Robert M. Jennings; Ann Bucklin; A.C. Pierrot-Bults
Arrow worms (Phylum Chaetognatha) are abundant planktonic organisms and important predators in many food webs; yet, the classification and evolutionary relationships among chaetognath species remain poorly understood. A seemingly simple body plan is underlain by subtle variation in morphological details, obscuring the affinities of species within the phylum. Many species achieve near global distributions, spanning the same latitudinal bands in all ocean basins, while others present disjunct ranges, in some cases with the same species apparently found at both poles. To better understand how these complex evolutionary and geographic variables are reflected in the species makeup of chaetognaths, we analyze DNA barcodes of the mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase c subunit I (COI) gene, from 52 specimens of 14 species of chaetognaths collected mainly from the Atlantic Ocean. Barcoding analysis was highly successful at discriminating described species of chaetognaths across the phylum, and revealed little geographical structure. This barcode analysis reveals hitherto unseen genetic variation among species of arrow worms, and provides insight into some species relationships of this enigmatic group.
Journal of Adhesion | 1995
Robert M. Jennings; Jeffrey F. Taylor; Richard J. Farris
Abstract A membrane deflection technique has been developed to measure the isotropic residual stress in biaxially-constrained coatings. The technique has been demonstrated on various materials, including polyimide, latex rubber and photoresist coatings. Stress values obtained from membrane deflection compared well with results obtained from time-averaged vibrational holographic interferometry except for values obtained from samples where rigidity effects were found to be important. A criterion based on the thickness, rigidity, stress and sample radius is also discussed, establishing the applicability of the technique to samples of low rigidity.
Molecular Ecology Resources | 2011
Robert M. Jennings; Ron J. Etter
We describe PCR primers and amplification protocols developed to obtain introns from conserved nuclear genes in deep‐sea protobranch bivalves. Because almost no sequence data for protobranchs are publically available, mollusk and other protostome sequences from GenBank were used to design degenerate primers, making these loci potentially useful in other invertebrate taxa. Amplification and sequencing success varied across the test group of 30 species, and we present five loci spanning this range of outcomes. Intron presence in the targeted regions also varied across genes and species, often within single genera; for instance, the calmodulin and β‐tubulin loci contained introns with high frequency, whereas the triose phosphate isomerase locus never contained an intron. In introns for which we were able to obtain preliminary estimates of polymorphism levels in single species, polymorphism was greater than traditional mitochondrial loci. These markers will greatly increase the ability to assess population structure in the ecologically important protobranchs, and may prove useful in other taxa as well.
Deep-sea Research Part Ii-topical Studies in Oceanography | 2010
Ann Bucklin; Russell R. Hopcroft; Ksenia Kosobokova; Lisa M. Nigro; Brian D. Ortman; Robert M. Jennings; Christopher J. Sweetman
Deep-sea Research Part Ii-topical Studies in Oceanography | 2010
Ann Bucklin; Brian D. Ortman; Robert M. Jennings; Lisa M. Nigro; Christopher J. Sweetman; Nancy J. Copley; Tracey Sutton; Peter H. Wiebe
Deep-sea Research Part Ii-topical Studies in Oceanography | 2010
Robert M. Jennings; Ann Bucklin; Holger Ossenbrügger; Russell R. Hopcroft
Polish Polar Research | 2014
Magdalena Błażewicz-Paszkowycz; Robert M. Jennings; Karen Jeskulke; Saskia Brix