Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-p9bg8 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-28T11:51:46.542Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Marine ‘Genetic Resources’ and the Potential Role of Protected Areas in Conserving Them

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 August 2009

Extract

Marine genetic variability has been studied at all levels within the hierarchy of biological systems, and some major findings to date are briefly reviewed in this paper. Important conclusions are that many marine populations may be quite variable genetically, and that this variability is particularly high in species-rich communities such as those of coral reefs. It is generally thought that variability does change in relation to ecological variables, and thus must contribute to adaptation to environment. At the community level there are marked geographical differences not only in the composition of marine biota, but also in their richness. While the importance of threats to genetic resources cannot be quantified in relation either to one another and to other areas of environmental concern, it is clear that long-term measures such as the establishment of protected areas must be planned with genetic considerations in mind, as these resources are related to the survival of valuable species, and to the important theme of biotic diversity.

Type
Main Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Foundation for Environmental Conservation 1983

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Aspinwall, N. (1974). Genetic analysis of the North American population of the Pink Salmon, Oncorhynchus gorbuscha, possible evidence for the neutral mutation random drift hypothesis. Evolution, 28, pp. 295305.Google ScholarPubMed
Ayala, F.J., Hedgecock, D., Zumwalt, G.S. & Valentine, J.W. (1973). Genetic variation in Tridacna maxima, an ecological analog of some unsuccessful evolutionary lineages. Evolution, 27, pp. 177–91.Google ScholarPubMed
Battaglia, B. (1958). Balanced polymorphism in Tisbe reticulata, a marine copepod. Evolution, 12, pp. 358–64.Google Scholar
Björklund, M.I. (1974). Achievements in marine conservation, I: Marine parks. Environmental Conservation, 1 (2), pp. 205–23.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bocquet, C., Lévi, C. & Teissier, G. (1951). Recherches sur la polychromatisme de Sphaeroma serratum. Arch. Zool. Exp. Gén., 87, pp. 245–97.Google Scholar
Briggs, J.C. (1974). Marine Zoogeography. McGraw-Hill, New York, NY, USA: xi + 475 pp., illustr.Google Scholar
Bulnheim, H.-P. & Scholl, A. (1981). Genetic variation between geographic populations of the amphipods Gammarus zaddachi and G. salinus. Mar. Biol., 64, pp. 105–15.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burgess, W. (1978). Butterfly Fishes of the World. Tropical Fish Hobbyist, Neptune City, New Jersey, USA: 832 pp., illustr.Google Scholar
Cross, T.F. & Payne, R.H. (1978). Geographic variation in Atlantic Cod, Gadus morhua, off eastern North America: a biochemical systematics approach. J. Fish. Res. Bd Can., 35, pp. 117–23.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cushing, D.H. (1981). Fisheries Biology, 2nd edn.University of Wisconsin Press, Madison, Wisconsin, USA: xvi + 295 pp., illustr.Google Scholar
Davis, G.E. (1981). On the role of underwater parks and sanctuaries in the management of coastal resources in the southeastern United States. Environmental Conservation, 8 (1), pp. 6770.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ekman, S. (1953). Zoogeography of the Sea. Sidgwick & Jackson, London, England, UK: xiv + 417 pp., illustr.Google Scholar
Estes, J.A. & Palmisano, J.F. (1974). Sea otters: their role in structuring nearshore communities. Science, 185, pp. 1058–60.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ferguson, A. & Mason, F.M. (1981). Allozyme evidence for reproductively isolated sympatric populations of Brown Trout Salmo trutta L. in Lough Melvin, Ireland. J. Fish. Biol., 18, pp. 629–42.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Frankel, O.H. & Soulé, M.E. (1981). Conservation and Evolution. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, England, UK: viii + 327 pp., illustr.Google Scholar
Frydenberg, O., Møller, D., Naevdal, G. & Sick, G. (1965). Haemoglobin polymorphism in Norwegian cod populations. Hereditas, 53, pp. 257–71.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gartner-Kepkay, K.E., Dickie, L.M., Freeman, K.R. & Zouros, E. (1980). Genetic differences and environments of mussel populations in the Maritime Provinces. Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci., 37 (5), pp. 775–82.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goeden, G.B. (1979). Biogeographic theory as a management tool. Environmental Conservation, 6 (1), pp. 2732, 5 figs.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gooch, J.L. & Schopf, T.J.M. (1971). Genetic variation in the marine ectoproct Schizoporella errata. Biol. Bull, 141, pp. 235–46.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gooch, J.L. & Schopf, T. J. M. (1972). Genetic variability in the deep sea: relation to environmental variability. Evolution, 26, pp. 545–52.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gooch, J.L., Smith, B.S. & Knupp, D. (1972). Regional survey of gene frequencies in the Mud Snail Nassarius obsoletus. Biol. Bull., 142, pp. 3648.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gorman, G.C. & Kim, Y. J., (1977). Genotype evolution in the face of phenotypic conservativeness: Abudefduf (Pomacentridae) from the Atlantic and Pacific sides of Panama. Copeia, 1977, pp. 694–7.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grant, P.T. & Mackie, A.M. (1977). Drugs from the sea—fact or fantasy? Nature (London), 267, pp. 786–8.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Grassle, J.P. & Grassle, J.F. (1976). Sibling species in the marine pollution indicator Capitella (Polychaeta). Science, 192, pp. 567–9.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hinegardner, R. & Rosen, D.E. (1972). Cellular DNA content and the evolution of teleostean fishes. Am. Nat., 106, pp. 621–44.Google Scholar
IUCN (1981). Principles, Criteria, and Guidelines for the Selection, Establishment, and Management, of Mediterranean Marine and Coastal Protected Areas. (UNEP/IG.23/INF.7.) United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), Nairobi, Kenya: vi + 39 pp. (mimeogr.).Google Scholar
Johannes, R.E. (1978). Traditional marine conservation in Oceania. Ann. Rev. Ecol. Syst., 9, pp. 349–64.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johannes, R.E. & Betzer, S.B. (1975). Introduction: marine communities respond differently to pollution in the tropics than at higher latitudes. Pp. 112 in Tropical Marine Pollution (Ed. Wood, E. J. Ferguson & Johannes, R.E.). Elsevier, Amsterdam, The Netherlands: ix + 192 pp., illustr.Google Scholar
Johnson, A.G., Utter, F.M. & Hodgins, H.O. (1973). Estimate of genetic polymorphism and heterozygosity in three species of rockfish (genus Sebastes). Comp. Biochem. Physiol., 44B, pp. 397406.Google Scholar
Johnson, M.S. (1974). Comparative geographic variation in Menidia. Evolution, 28, pp. 607–18.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Klausewitz, W. (1972). The zoogeographical and palaeogeographical problem of the Indian Ocean and the Red Sea according to the ichthyofauna of the littoral. J. Mar. Biol. Ass. India, 14, pp. 697706.Google Scholar
Koehn, R.K. & Mitton, J.G. (1972). Population genetics of marine pelecypods, I: Ecological heterogenity and evolutionary strategy at an enzyme locus. Am. Nat., 106, pp. 4756.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lessios, H.A. (1981). Divergence in allopatry: molecular and morphological differentiation between sea-urchins separated by the Isthmus of Panama. Evolution, 35, pp. 618–34.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lubbock, R. (1980 a). The shore fishes of Ascension Island. J. Fish. Biol., 17, pp. 283303.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lubbock, R. (1980 b). Clone-specific cellular recognition in a sea-anemone. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA, 77, pp. 6667–9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McCosker, J.E. & Dawson, C.E. (1975). Biotic passage through the Panama Canal with particular reference to fishes. Mar. Biol., 30, pp. 343–52.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mann, R. (Ed.) (1979). Exotic Species in Mariculture. MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA: xii + 363 pp., illustr.Google Scholar
Mileikovsky, S.A. (1971). Types of larval development in marine bottom invertebrates, their distribution and ecological significance: a re-evaluation. Mar. Biol., 10, pp. 193213.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Møller, D. (1968). Genetic diversity in cod. Hereditas, 60, pp. 132.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
MøLLER, D. (1969). The relationship between arctic and coastal cod in their immature stages illustrated by frequencies of genetic characters. Fisk. Dr Skr. Ser. Havunders., 15, pp. 220–33.Google Scholar
Morgan, R.D. & Ulanowicz, N.I. (1976). The frequency of muscle protein polymorphism in Menidia menidia (Atherinidae) along the Atlantic coast. Copeia, 1976, pp. 356–60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Murdock, E.A., Ferguson, A. & Seed, R. (1975). Geographical variation in leucine aminopeptidase in Mytilus edulis L. from the Irish coasts. J. Exp. Mar. Biol. Ecol., 19, pp. 3341.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nelson, K. & Hedgecock, D. (1980). Enzyme polymorphism and adaptive strategy in the decapod Crustacea. Am. Nat., 116, pp. 238–88.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nevo, E. (1978). Genetic variation in natural populations: patterns and theory. Theor. Pop. Biol., 13, pp. 121–77.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Payne, R.H., Child, A.R. & Forrest, A. (1971). Geographic variation in the Atlantic Salmon. Nature (London), 231, pp. 250–52.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Polunin, N.V.C., Halim, M.K. & Kvalvågnaes, K. (1983). Bali Barat: an Indonesian marine protected area and its resources. Biol. Conserv., 25, pp. 1791, illustr.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Por, F.D. (1978). Lessepsian Migration. Springer, Berlin, W. Germany: x + 228 pp., illustr.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Randall, J.E. (1976). The endemic shore fishes of the Hawaiian Islands, Lord Howe Island, and Easter Island. ORSTOM Trav. Doc, 47, pp. 4973.Google Scholar
Ray, G.C. (1976). Critical marine habitats: A statement on the nature of marine ecosystems with criteria and guidelines for the description of marine parks and reserves. IUCN Publ. New Series, 37, pp. 1559.Google Scholar
Redfield, J.A., Hedgecock, D., Nelson, K. & Salini, J.P. (1980). Low heterozygosity in tropical marine crustaceans of Australia and the trophic stability hypothesis. Mar. Biol. Letters, 1, pp. 303–13.Google Scholar
Sabaddin, A. (1959). Analisa genetica del policromatismo di Botryllus schlosseri (Pallas) Savigny (Ascidiacea). Bull. Zool., 26, pp. 231–4.Google Scholar
Sale, P.F. (1980). The ecology of fishes on coral reefs. Oceanogr. Mar. Biol. Ann. Rev., 18, pp. 367421.Google Scholar
Salvat, B. (1976). Guidelines for the planning and management of marine parks and reserves. IUCN Publ. New Series, 37, pp. 7593.Google Scholar
Scheltema, R.S. (1971). Larval dispersal as a means of genetic exchange between geographically separated populations of shallow-water benthic marine gastropods. Biol. Bull., 140, pp. 284327.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schick, J.M., Taylor, W.F. & Lamb, A.N. (1981). Reproduction and genetic variation in the deposit-feeding sea-star Ctenodiscus crispatus. Mar. Biol., 63, pp. 5165.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schopf, T.J.M. (1970). Taxonomic diversity gradients of ectoprocts and bivalves and their geologic implications. Bull. Geol. Soc. Am., 81, pp. 3765–8.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schopf, T.J.M. (1980). Paleoceanography. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA: xii + 341 pp.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Selander, R.K. (1976). Genie variation in natural populations. Pp. 2145 in Molecular Evolution in Natural Populations (Ed. Ayala, F.J.). Sinauer Associates, Sunderland, Massachusetts, USA: illustr. [Not available for checking.]Google Scholar
Shaklee, J.B. & Tamaru, C.S. (1981). Biochemical and morphological evolution in Hawaiian bonefishes (Albula). Syst. Zool, 30, pp. 125–46.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Siebenaller, J.F. (1978). Genetic variation in deep-sea invertebrate populations: the bathyal gastropod Bathybembix bairdii. Mar. Biol., 47, pp. 265–75.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Singh, S.M. & Zouros, E. (1978). Genetic variation associated with growth-rate in the American Oyster (Crassostrea virginica). Evolution, 32, pp. 342–53.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, I.R. (1980). Traditional fisheries development in the Philippines. Pp. 1135–40 in Tropical Ecology and Development, Part 2 (Ed. Furtado, J.I.). The International Society of Tropical Ecology, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia: pp. 6931383, illustr.Google Scholar
Somero, G.N. & Soulé, M. (1974). Genetic variation in marine fishes as a test of the niche-variation hypothesis. Nature (London), 249, pp. 670–2.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Staiger, H. (1956). Genetical and morphological variation in Purpura lapillus with respect to local and regional differentiation of population groups. Ann. Biol. (3e serie), 33, pp. 251–8.Google Scholar
Stanley, S.M. (1973). Effect of competition on rates of evolution, with special reference to bivalve molluscs and mammals. Syst. Zool., 22, pp. 486506.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stebbins, G.L. & Ayala, F.J. (1981). Is a new evolutionary synthesis necessary? Science, 213, pp. 967–71.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Stehli, F.G. & Wells, J.W. (1971). Diversity and age patterns in hermatypic corals. Syst. Zool, 20, pp. 115–26.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stehli, F.G., McAlester, A.L. & Helsley, C.E. (1967). Taxonomic diversity of recent bivalves and some implications for geology. Bull Geol. Soc. Am., 38, pp. 455–66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Struhsaker, J.W. (1968). Selection mechanisms associated with intraspecific shell variation in Littorina picta (Prosobranchia: Mesogastropoda). Evolution, 22, pp. 459–80.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Tauber, C.A. & Tauber, M.J. (1977). Sympatric speciation based on allelic changes at three loci: evidence from natural populations in two habitats. Science, 197, pp. 1298–9.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Thresher, R.E. (1978). Polymorphism, mimicry and the evolution of the hamlets (Hypoplectrus, Serranidae). Bull. Mar. Sci., 28, pp. 345–63.Google Scholar
Valentine, J.W. (1973). Evolutionary Palaeoecology of the Marine Biosphere. Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, USA: xvi + 512 pp., illustr.Google Scholar
Valentine, J.W. (1976). Genetic strategies of adaptation. Pp. 7894 in Molecular Evolution in Natural Populations. (Ed. Ayala, F.J.). Sinauer Associates, Sunderland, Massachusetts, USA: illustr. [Not available for checking.]Google Scholar
Valentine, J.W. & Moores, E.M. (1970). Plate-tectonic regulation of faunal diversity and sea-level: a model. Nature (London), 228, pp. 657–9.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Vawter, A.T., Rosenblatt, R. & Gorman, G.C. (1980). Genetic divergence among fishes of the eastern Pacific and the Caribbean: support for the molecular clock. Evolution, 34, pp. 705–11.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Vermeij, G.J. (1978). Biogeography and Adaptation. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA: xi + 352 pp., illustr.Google Scholar
Wheeler, A.C. (1958). The identity of the British fish Parviclinus spinosus. Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 130, pp. 253–6.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Williams, G.C., Koehn, R.K. & Mitton, J.B. (1973). Genetic differentiation without isolation in the American Eel, Anguilla rostrata. Evolution, 27, pp. 192204.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed