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The red macroalga invasion provides an opportunity to investigate the evolution of biphasic life cycles and of reproductive modes by understanding how they structure and contribute colonizing new environments in natural conditions. In hard bottom habitats, we find gametophytes and tetrasporophytes fixed by holdfasts to hard substrates, whereas in soft bottom habitats, we find free-living tetrasporophytes either drifting or anchored by tube-building polychaetes. We collected thalli from hard and soft bottom habitats along the Eastern Shore of Virginia and Maryland to investigate the role of substrate on life cycle and reproductive mode dynamics. We determined the phase and sex using observable reproductive structures and a sex-linked PCR assay, followed by genotyping all thalli using nine microsatellite loci. Sexual reproduction prevailed in hard bottom sites, whereas clonal (asexual) reproduction dominated soft bottom sites and was accompanied by tetrasporophytic dominance. There was site-specific variation in selfing and clonal rates that are supported by observations of physiological stress and local extirpation, such as at Ape Hole Creek and Fowling Point, respectively. We found evidence of isolation by distance and the structuring of genetic diversity by habitat type, then site, and finally by year. While broad patterns have been described across the extant range, we clarify population genetic patterns in hard versus soft bottom habitats that are not confounded by the invasion history comparing native and non-native thalli. These results have implications for the on-going spread of this alga and contribute to our understanding of the population genetics of partially clonal taxa.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2025.06.19.660572 | DOI Listing |
Curr Biol
September 2025
Centre for Palaeobiology and Biosphere Evolution and School of Heritage and Culture, University of Leicester, Kathleen Kenyon Building, University Road, Leicester LE1 7RH, UK.
The Upper Jurassic Solnhofen Archipelago of Germany has yielded a pterosaur assemblage that has long underpinned and continues to dominate much of our understanding of these flying reptiles. Knowledge of how this assemblage was shaped by processes of fossilization, critical for generating robust paleobiological hypotheses, remains limited. Here, we combine fatal trauma case studies with quantitative taphonomic data to reveal two distinct fossilization pathways.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiology (Basel)
July 2025
The Scientific and Technological Research Council of Türkiye (TÜBİTAK) Marmara Research Center, Gebze, Kocaeli 41470, Türkiye.
Dense aggregations of species in the family Pinnidae give soft substrata a specific characterization. They may influence the biological and physical properties of the surrounding sediments. Bottom-trawl samplings performed in the Sea of Marmara revealed populations of a large pinnid species, particularly at depths of 40-45 m in soft substrata.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSmall
September 2025
School of Physical Science and Technology, ShanghaiTech University, Shanghai, 201210, China.
Conventional semiconductor manufacturing relies on top-down lithography, which faces fundamental limitations in resolution, material versatility, and cost at the nanoscale. While bottom-up colloidal strategies offer alternative pathways, they are constrained by ligand contamination and insufficient precision for integrated circuits. Here a gas-phase synthesis and assembly platform is reported that overcomes these challenges by combining plasma-generated, stabilizer-free semiconductor nanoparticles (NPs) with electric-field-guided 3D nanoprinting.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Pollut
August 2025
Department of Evolutionary Biology, Ecology and Environmental Sciences & Biodiversity Research Institute (IRBio), University of Barcelona, Av. Diagonal 643, Catalonia, Barcelona, 08028, Spain.
Antarctic benthic ecosystems are currently threatened by global change and direct human impact. Pollution from local human activities is among the most relevant emerging hazards affecting Antarctic organisms. Micro-litter (ML) has already been found in Antarctic marine ecosystems, including diverse benthic fauna.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Environ Manage
August 2025
University Bremen, Bibliothekstraße 1, Bremen, 28359, Germany.
In response to climate change, the expansion of renewable energies leads to an increasing number of offshore wind farms in the North Sea. This comes along with an increase in (artificial) hard substrates in a mainly soft-bottom dominated marine area with so far largely unknown consequences for the underlying ecosystem functioning. We used a large combined dataset (both hard- and soft-substrate data) to model the secondary production of fouling communities on turbine foundations and of soft-bottom fauna inside and outside offshore wind farms (OWF) in the southern North Sea (Belgium, the Netherlands, Germany).
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