Population structure of odd-broodline Asian pink salmon and its contrast to the even-broodline structure |
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Authors: | S. L. Hawkins N. V. Varnavskaya E. A. Matzak V. V. Efremov C. M. Guthrie III R. L. Wilmot H. Mayama F. Yamazaki A. J. Gharrett |
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Affiliation: | National Marine Fisheries Service, Auke Bay Laboratory, 11305 Glacier Hwy, Juneau AK 99801–8626, U.S.A.;Kamchatka Scientific Research Institute of Fisheries and Oceanography, KamchatNIRO, Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky 683602, Kamchatka, Russia;Pacific Research Fisheries Centre (TINRO-CENTRE), 4 Shevchenko Alley, Vladivostok 690600, Russia;Russian Academy of Sciences, Far East Branch, Institute of Marine Biology, Vladivostok 690041, Russia;National Salmon Resources Center, Nakanoshima, Sapporo 062–0922, Japan;Hokkaido University, Laboratory of Genetic and Embryology, Faculty of Fisheries, Hakodate 041, Japan;Division of Fisheries University of Alaska Fairbanks, 11120 Glacier Hwy, Juneau, AK 99801, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | Most of the variation (99%) of Asian odd-broodline pink salmon Oncorhynchus gorbuscha , based on data at 32 variable (46 total) allozyme loci from 35 populations, occurred within populations. The remaining interpopulation variation was attributable to: (1) differences between northern (the northern Sea of Okhotsk, eastern Kamchatka Peninsula and western Kamchatka Peninsula) and southern (Hokkaido Island, Kuril Islands and Sakhalin Island) populations; (2) differences between the southern areas; (3) low variation among populations within some areas. The pattern contrasted strongly with that observed for Asian even-broodline populations, which had a strong structure, possibly related to geographic and oceanographic influences. Isolation-by-distance analyses of each of the two broodlines showed a stronger relationship (x 4·8) among even- than odd-broodline populations. Allele frequency differences between even- and odd-broodlines reflected the reproductive isolation of the broodlines. However, there were no fixed frequency differences which, considered with the differing population structures, suggests that migration-drift equilibrium has not yet obtained in one or both broodlines. The structural differences also suggest it is likely that the even- and odd-broodlines are of different ages and that one is derived from the other. Allozyme data do not provide a genealogical basis for identifying the ancestral lineage. |
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Keywords: | Oncorhynchus gorbuscha pink salmon population structure allozyme isolation by distance |
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