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Mixing rates in weakly differentiated stocks of greater amberjack (<Emphasis Type="Italic">Seriola dumerili</Emphasis>) in the Gulf of Mexico
Authors:" target="_blank">John S Hargrove  Debra J Murie  Daryl C Parkyn  Emily V Saarinen  James D Austin
Institution:1.Department of Wildlife Ecology and Conservation,University of Florida,Gainesville,USA;2.Tennessee Cooperative Fishery Research Unit,Tennessee Tech University,Cookeville,USA;3.Program in Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, School of Forest Resources and Conservation,University of Florida,Gainesville,USA;4.Division of Natural Sciences,New College of Florida,Sarasota,USA
Abstract:The greater amberjack (Seriola dumerili) is a commercially and recreationally important marine fish species in the southeastern United States, where it has been historically managed as two non-mixing stocks (Gulf of Mexico and Atlantic). Mark-recapture studies and analysis of mitochondrial DNA have suggested the two stocks are demographically independent; however, little is currently known about when and where spawning occurs in Gulf of Mexico amberjack, and whether stock mixture occurs on breeding grounds. The primary objective of this study was to quantify stock mixture among breeding populations of amberjack collected from the Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico. Genetic data based on 11 loci identified very low, though statistically significant differentiation among Gulf of Mexico samples (GST = 0.007, \(G_{{{\text{ST}}}}^{\prime }\) = 0.009; all P?=?0.001) and between reproductive adults collected from two spawning areas (GST = 0.007, \(G_{{{\text{ST}}}}^{\prime }\) = 0.014; all P?=?0.001). Naïve Bayesian mixture analysis supported a single genetic cluster p(S|data)?=?0.734] whereas trained clustering (using Atlantic and Gulf spawning fish) gave the highest support to a two-cluster model (p(S|data)?=?1.0). Our results support the argument that the genetic structuring of greater amberjack is more complex than the previously assumed two, non-mixing stock model. Although our data provide evidence of limited population structure, we argue in favour of non-panmixia among reproductive fish collected from the Gulf of Mexico and Florida Keys.
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