Layton Kara K S, Dempson Brian, Snelgrove Paul V R, Duffy Steven J, Messmer Amber M, Paterson Ian G, Jeffery Nicholas W, Kess Tony, Horne John B, Salisbury Sarah J, Ruzzante Daniel E, Bentzen Paul, Côté David, Nugent Cameron M, Ferguson Moira M, Leong Jong S, Koop Ben F, Bradbury Ian R
Department of Ocean Sciences Memorial University of Newfoundland St. John's NL Canada.
Fisheries and Oceans Canada Northwest Atlantic Fisheries Centre St. John's NL Canada.
Evol Appl. 2020 Feb 20;13(5):1055-1068. doi: 10.1111/eva.12922. eCollection 2020 May.
The resiliency of populations and species to environmental change is dependent on the maintenance of genetic diversity, and as such, quantifying diversity is central to combating ongoing widespread reductions in biodiversity. With the advent of next-generation sequencing, several methods now exist for resolving fine-scale population structure, but the comparative performance of these methods for genetic assignment has rarely been tested. Here, we evaluate the performance of sequenced microsatellites and a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) array to resolve fine-scale population structure in a critically important salmonid in north eastern Canada, Arctic Charr (). We also assess the utility of sequenced microsatellites for fisheries applications by quantifying the spatial scales of movement and exploitation through genetic assignment of fishery samples to rivers of origin and comparing these results with a 29-year tagging dataset. Self-assignment and simulation-based analyses of 111 genome-wide microsatellite loci and 500 informative SNPs from 28 populations of Arctic Charr in north-eastern Canada identified largely river-specific genetic structure. Despite large differences (~4X) in the number of loci surveyed between panels, mean self-assignment accuracy was similar with the microsatellite loci and the SNP panel (>90%). Subsequent analysis of 996 fishery-collected samples using the microsatellite panel revealed that larger rivers contribute greater numbers of individuals to the fishery and that coastal fisheries largely exploit individuals originating from nearby rivers, corroborating results from traditional tagging experiments. Our results demonstrate the efficacy of sequence-based microsatellite genotyping to advance understanding of fine-scale population structure and harvest composition in northern and understudied species.
种群和物种对环境变化的恢复力取决于遗传多样性的维持,因此,量化多样性是应对当前生物多样性广泛减少的核心。随着下一代测序技术的出现,现在有几种方法可用于解析精细尺度的种群结构,但这些方法在基因分型方面的比较性能很少得到测试。在这里,我们评估了测序微卫星和单核苷酸多态性(SNP)阵列在解析加拿大东北部一种极其重要的鲑科鱼类——北极红点鲑(Salvelinus alpinus)的精细尺度种群结构方面的性能。我们还通过将渔业样本基因分型到其起源河流来量化移动和开发的空间尺度,并将这些结果与一个长达29年的标记数据集进行比较,从而评估测序微卫星在渔业应用中的效用。对来自加拿大东北部28个北极红点鲑种群的111个全基因组微卫星位点和500个信息性SNP进行的自我分型和基于模拟的分析确定了主要是河流特异性的遗传结构。尽管两个面板之间调查的位点数存在很大差异(约4倍),但微卫星位点和SNP面板的平均自我分型准确率相似(>90%)。随后使用微卫星面板对996个渔业采集样本进行的分析表明,较大的河流为渔业贡献了更多个体,并且沿海渔业主要捕捞来自附近河流的个体,这证实了传统标记实验的结果。我们的结果证明了基于序列的微卫星基因分型在推进对北方和研究不足物种的精细尺度种群结构和捕捞组成的理解方面的有效性。