Volume 39, Issue 6 pp. 1250-1260
Article
Free Access

LOCALIZED ADAPTATION OF CLONES OF THE SEA ANEMONE ACTINIA TENEBROSA

David J. Ayre

David J. Ayre

Department of Zoology, University of Western Australia, Nedlands, 6009 Western Australia

Present address: Department of Biology, University of Wollongong, P.O. Box 1144, Wollongong, New South Wales 2500, Australia.Search for more papers by this author
First published: November 1985
Citations: 38
Corresponding Editor: P. H. Harvey

Abstract

Adult Actinia tenebrosa were reciprocally transplanted within and between colonies separated by 2 or 4 km. These experiments revealed powerful genetic and environmental effects on adult size and asexual fecundity and demonstrate that clones may be highly locally adapted. Local adults displayed significantly greater asexual fecundity than do adults transplanted from other colonies, although all groups showed similar survivorships. This provides the first demonstration of fine scale adaptation, in either terrestrial or marine environments, for a clonal species with large, panmictic sexually breeding populations. These findings, together with the results of earlier studies of this species, strongly support the assumptions and predictions of the Strawberry-Coral Model (Williams, 1975).

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