Niche partitioning and the coexistence of two cryptic Dictyota (Dictyotales, Phaeophyceae) species from the Canary Islands
Date
2010Abstract
Coexistence in a homogeneous environment
requires species to specialize in distinct niches.
Sympatry of cryptic species is of special interest to
both ecologists and evolutionary biologists because
the mechanisms that facilitate their persistent coexistence are obscure. In this study, we report on two
sympatric Dictyota species, D. dichotoma (Huds.)
J. V. Lamour. and the newly described species
D. cymatophila sp. nov., from the Canary Islands.
Gene sequence data (rbcL, psbA, nad1, cox1, cox3,
and LSU rDNA) demonstrate that D. dichotoma and
D. cymatophila do not represent sister species.
Rather, D. cymatophila and D. dichotoma have converged on a nearly identical morphology, only to be
distinguished with detailed morphometric observations. Both species co-occur in eulittoral pools
and the shallow subtidal in Tenerife. Even though
D. cymatophila was more dominant in wave-exposed
places and D. dichotoma in less exposed areas, the
spatial distribution of both species overlapped in
intermediate habitats. The species display radically
different phenologies. D. dichotoma reached its
highest density in winter and early spring and
disappeared nearly completely in autumn, while
D. cymatophila dominated the study site from July until
November. The timing of gamete release also differs
between both species, D. dichotoma releasing gametes
twice every lunar cycle, while the release of gametes
in D. cymatophila occurred roughly every other day