The spatial scales at which individuals within a population interact and the geographic extent of larval dispersal shape the dynamics of marine populations. Dispersal capabilities of some species extend across entire ocean basins [
1], but larval propagules of many other species are retained close to their source [
2]. Larval development can impose limits on dispersal. Species that brood their offspring (direct development) tend to have more restricted distributions than species with long-lived, planktonic larvae [
3], though exceptions exist [
4]. Species that aggregate in small patches may interact and reproduce with other individuals in an area encompassing a meter or less [
5] and larvae that lack broad dispersal potential may recruit to their natal population [
6]. A sampling scheme that fails to account for the localized effects of self-recruiting patches may create an appearance of panmixia, even if substructure exists among patches [
7].
Species dependent on deep-sea hydrothermal vents are restricted to patchy, ephemeral habitats that limit the areal extent and occurrence of populations. Hydrothermal vent fields are found on mid-ocean ridges, back-arc spreading centres, and submarine volcanoes [
8]. Organisms that thrive at vents are supported by chemoautotrophic microbes that metabolize reduced compounds in the vent effluent [
9]. Vent habitats are transient, at temporal scales ranging from days to hundreds of years [
10], and constituent species may be subject to frequent local extinction and recolonization events [
11,
12]. Survival of vent species therefore depends on fast growth, rapid reproduction, and dispersal abilities that shape the diversity and genetic structure of populations [
13,
14].
At mid-ocean ridges, deep-sea hydrothermal vents are distributed along roughly linear axes that may function as dispersal corridors [
15-
17]. Geographic populations of hydrothermal vent-dependent species can be panmictic across the extent of their range (e.g., the shrimp,
Rimicaris exoculata on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge [
18-
20]) but this is not always the case.
Evidence for isolation-by-distance in vent species has sometimes been ambiguous due to small sample sizes and inconsistency in the resolution of various genetic markers [
21]. Considerable evidence exists for geographic subdivision associated with geomorphological features that affect different taxa to varying degrees. For example, the Easter Microplate is associated with isolation of northern and southern East Pacific Rise populations of mussels, but not of polychaete annelids [
22,
23]. A 2000-m long "habitat gap" across the Equator is implicated in the isolation of some East Pacific Rise species and variable impedance of gene flow in other species [
23,
24]. Similarly, a 350-km long ridge offset, the Blanco Transform Fault, isolates Juan de Fuca and Gorda ridge limpet populations [
25]. The same barrier interacts with current regimes and is correlated with southward unidirectional gene flow in the vent polychaete
Ridgeia piscesae [
17]. Life history and behavioral attributes of various taxa result in these differing responses to shared dispersal barriers [
14].
Identification of population structure at various spatial scales depends in part on the choice of genetic markers. For example, amplified fragment length polymorphisms were used to test for fine-scale differentiation among discrete patches of the tubeworm,
Riftia pachyptila, separated by as little as 400 m in a venting area along the East Pacific Rise, although sample sizes were small (
n < 15 per site [
26]). More conservative mitochondrial and nuclear DNA sequences in
R. pachyptila revealed panmixia at local scales and isolation-by-distance [
27] at greater geographical scales [
28,
29].
In contrast to mid-ocean ridge systems, limited attention has been afforded to the population structure of vent organisms from western Pacific back-arc basins. These basins are distributed in a non-linear pattern, reflecting the complex tectonic history of the region [
30]. Hydrothermal vents in western Pacific back-arc basins are geographically isolated from vents on the East Pacific Rise [
31]. Regional isolation of species was detected among western pacific vents [
30]: the Okinawa trough and Izu-Ogasawara Arc have a faunal assemblage distinct from that of other western Pacific hydrothermal vents, and the faunal composition of the Marianna Trough is distinct from that of neighbouring basins [
30]. Vent species tend to be shared among Manus, North Fiji, and Lau Basin, but are distinct from species that occur at the Okinawa and Marianna Troughs or the Izu-Ogasawara Arc [
30].
Because back-arc basin hydrothermal systems in the western Pacific are located on isolated ridge segments (in contrast to the linear, semi-continuous series of segments on mid-ocean ridges), it has been hypothesized that reduced connectivity among western Pacific back-arc basins may yield more endemic vent fauna within discrete back-arc basins [
32]. Some species endemic to these basins appear to be panmictic across multiple basins (e.g., the mussel
Bathymodiolus brevior [
33]), whereas others are restricted to single basins (e.g., neoverrucid barnacles [
34]). Provannid snail species in the genus
Alviniconcha represent a cryptic species complex composed of at least three evolutionary lineages, one that occurs at hydrothermal vents in North Fiji Basin, one that is restricted to vents in the Marianna Trough, and one that co-occurs in both Manus and North Fiji Basin [
35]. A similar pattern of strong genetic differentiation may exist within other species. To date, comprehensive efforts have not been made to characterize population structure within vent taxa of western Pacific back-arc basins.
Ifremeria nautilei is a provannid gastropod that occurs in Manus, North Fiji, and Lau Basins and depends on sulphur-oxidizing bacterial endosymbionts for nutrition. Sessile adults live in discrete patches near the effluent of diffuse-flow hydrothermal vents [
36,
30]. Females possess a specialized brood-pouch in their foot and they release ciliated pre-veliger larvae (Warén's larvae) that are hypothesized to have long-distance dispersal capabilities [
37]. Preliminary studies indicated that
I. nautilei exhibits distinct mitochondrial haplotypes in Manus and North Fiji Basins [
38], but population structure has not been assessed at smaller spatial scales--among vent fields within basins (henceforth
sites), among sulphide mounds within vent fields (henceforth
mounds), or among discrete patches on vent mounds (henceforth
patches).
We examined genetic population structure of
Ifremeria nautilei from hydrothermal vents in Manus, North Fiji, and Lau Basins at multiple scales, ranging from meters to thousands of kilometres (Figure ). A nested sampling strategy was employed within Manus Basin to test the null hypothesis that
I. nautilei exhibits no population structure among discrete patches at spatial scales of meters to 40 kilometres. The entire Manus Basin population was then compared to North Fiji and Lau basin samples to assess the relationship between increasing spatial scales (1000 kilometres to 3500 kilometres) and genetic differentiation. Genetic markers for differentiation at these scales included partial sequences of mitochondrial cytochrome-
c-oxidase subunit I, and an array of nuclear DNA microsatellite loci [
39]. By comparing these two types of molecular markers, we can separate evolutionary processes, revealed by
COI sequence data and dependent on mutation rates, from ecologic processes, revealed by microsatellite allele frequencies and based on the recombination of alleles with each generation [
40]. If the specialized Warén's larvae produced by
Ifremeria nautilei are adapted for long-distance dispersal [
37], population structure should be minimal over all scales. Alternatively, if
I. nautilei disperse in a manner consistent with other sessile invertebrates with specialized habitat needs [
41] genetic differentiation may occur at spatial scales less than one kilometre.