Authors
Pim Bongaerts, Ira R Cooke, Hua Ying, Dagmar Wels, Stijn den Haan, Alejandra Hernandez-Agreda, Christopher A Brunner, Sophie Dove, Norbert Englebert, Gal Eyal, Sylvain Foret, Mila Grinblat, Kyra B Hay, Saki Harii, David C Hayward, YU Lin, Morana Mihaljević, Aurelie Moya, Paul Muir, Frederic Sinniger, Patrick Smallhorn-West, Gergely Torda, Mark A Ragan, Madeleine JH van Oppen, Ove Hoegh-Guldberg
Publication date
2021/6/7
Journal
Current Biology
Volume
31
Issue
11
Pages
2286-2298. e8
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Coral reefs are the epitome of species diversity, yet the number of described scleractinian coral species, the framework-builders of coral reefs, remains moderate by comparison. DNA sequencing studies are rapidly challenging this notion by exposing a wealth of undescribed diversity, but the evolutionary and ecological significance of this diversity remains largely unclear. Here, we present an annotated genome for one of the most ubiquitous corals in the Indo-Pacific (Pachyseris speciosa) and uncover, through a comprehensive genomic and phenotypic assessment, that it comprises morphologically indistinguishable but ecologically divergent lineages. Demographic modeling based on whole-genome resequencing indicated that morphological crypsis (across micro- and macromorphological traits) was due to ancient morphological stasis rather than recent divergence. Although the lineages occur sympatrically …
Total citations
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