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Genome‐wide analysis reveals demographic and life‐history patterns associated with habitat modification in landlocked,deep‐spawning sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka)
Authors:Farida Samad&#x;zada  Brett T van Poorten  Shannon Harris  Lyse Godbout  Michael A Russello
Institution:1. Department of Biology, University of British Columbia, Kelowna BC, Canada ; 2. Applied Freshwater Ecology Research Unit, British Columbia Ministry of Environment and Climate Change Strategy, Vancouver BC, Canada ; 3. School of Resource and Environmental Management, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby BC, Canada ; 4. Pacific Biological Station, Fisheries and Oceans Canada, Nanaimo BC, Canada
Abstract:Human‐mediated habitat fragmentation in freshwater ecosystems can negatively impact genetic diversity, demography, and life history of native biota, while disrupting the behavior of species that are dependent on spatial connectivity to complete their life cycles. In the Alouette River system (British Columbia, Canada), dam construction in 1928 impacted passage of anadromous sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka), with the last records of migrants occurring in the 1930s. Since that time, O. nerka persisted as a resident population in Alouette Reservoir until experimental water releases beginning in 2005 created conditions for migration; two years later, returning migrants were observed for the first time in ~70 years, raising important basic and applied questions regarding life‐history variation and population structure in this system. Here, we investigated the genetic distinctiveness and population history of Alouette Reservoir O. nerka using genome‐wide SNP data (n = 7,709 loci) collected for resident and migrant individuals, as well as for neighboring anadromous sockeye salmon and resident kokanee populations within the Fraser River drainage (n = 312 individuals). Bayesian clustering and principal components analyses based on neutral loci revealed five distinct clusters, largely associated with geography, and clearly demonstrated that Alouette Reservoir resident and migrant individuals are genetically distinct from other O. nerka populations in the Fraser River drainage. At a finer level, there was no clear evidence for differentiation between Alouette Reservoir residents and migrants; although we detected eight high‐confidence outlier loci, they all mapped to sex chromosomes suggesting that differences were likely due to uneven sex ratios rather than life history. Taken together, these data suggest that contemporary Alouette Reservoir O. nerka represents a landlocked sockeye salmon population, constituting the first reported instance of deep‐water spawning behavior associated with this life‐history form. This finding punctuates the need for reassessment of conservation status and supports ongoing fisheries management activities in Alouette Reservoir.
Keywords:ecotype variation  fragmentation  life‐  history trait polymorphisms  restoration  salmonids  sex bias
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