The Rapid, Mass Invasion of New Zealand by North American Daphnia
pulex/pulicaria
Abstract
Non-indigenous Daphnia ‘pulex’ have been found in many lakes in New
Zealand (NZ) in the past 20 years, suggesting a recent invasion.
However, very little is known about the origin of invasive D. ‘pulex’,
whether they are D. pulex or D. pulicaria, and whether they are
obligately asexual clones or cyclical parthenogens. Furthermore, the
source and time of arrival of the invasive genotype(s) are unclear. We
address these questions by genomic sequencing Daphnia populations from
13 lakes on the South Island and one on the North Island, NZ. Based on
~24,000 monomorphic species-specific markers, the
invasive Daphnia on the South Island were found to be D. pulicaria,
while those on the North Island are D. pulex/ pulicaria hybrids. Both
the South and North Island Daphnia are phylogenetically clustered with
North American D. pulicaria/pulex, thereby suggesting their North
American origins. We further found that the South Island Daphnia
populations are fixed heterozygotes for nearly all bi-allelic sites in
the nuclear genome and contain identical mitochondrial genomes,
suggesting the origin and proliferation from a single founder clone,
which we experimentally verified to be an obligate asexual. Estimates
from molecular data imply a colonization time for the South Island
populations of ~ 60 years ago, with a likely invasion
route associated with the introduction of salmonids from North America.
Key words: Daphnia pulex; Daphnia pulicaria; invasion; obligately
asexual; hybridization