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Abstract
The anthropogenic introduction of exotic species is one of the greatest
modern threats to marine biodiversity. Yet exotic species introductions
remain difficult to predict and are easily misunderstood because knowledge
of natural dispersal patterns, species diversity, and biogeography is
often insufficient to distinguish between a broadly dispersed natural
population and an exotic one. Here we compare a global molecular phylogeny
of a representative marine meroplanktonic taxon, the moon-jellyfish Aurelia,
with natural dispersion patterns predicted by a global bio-physical ocean
model. Despite assumed high dispersal ability the phylogeny reveals many
cryptic species and predominantly regional structure with one notable
exception: the globally distributed Aurelia sp.1 which, molecular
data suggest, may occasionally traverse the Pacific unaided. This is refuted
by the ocean model, which shows much more limited dispersion and patterns
of distribution broadly consistent with modern biogeographic zones, thus
identifying multiple introductions world-wide of this cryptogenic species.
This approach also supports existing evidence that (i) the occurrence
in Hawaii of Aurelia sp.4 and other native Indo-West Pacific species
with similar life-histories is most likely due to anthropogenic translocation,
and (ii) there may be a route for rare natural colonization of northeast
North America by the European marine snail Littorina littorea,
whose status as endemic or exotic is unclear.
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