St John Carl A, Timm Laura E, Gruenthal Kristen M, Larson Wesley A
Department of Natural Resources and the Environment Cornell University Ithaca New York USA.
National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration, National Marine Fisheries Service Alaska Fisheries Science Center, Auke Bay Laboratories Juneau Alaska USA.
Evol Appl. 2024 Dec 31;18(1):e70049. doi: 10.1111/eva.70049. eCollection 2025 Jan.
High-latitude ocean basins are the most productive on earth, supporting high diversity and biomass of economically and socially important species. A long tradition of responsible fisheries management has sustained these species for generations, but modern threats from climate change, habitat loss, and new fishing technologies threaten their ecosystems and the human communities that depend on them. Among these species, Alaska's most charismatic megafaunal invertebrate, the red king crab, faces all three of these threats and has declined substantially in many parts of its distribution. Managers have identified stock structure and local adaptation as crucial information to help understand biomass declines and how to potentially reverse them, with regulation and possible stock enhancement. We generated low-coverage whole genome sequencing (lcWGS) data on red king crabs from five regions: The Aleutian Islands, eastern Bering Sea, northern Bering Sea, Gulf of Alaska, and Southeast Alaska. We used data from millions of genetic markers generated from lcWGS to build on previous studies of population structure in Alaska that used < 100 markers and to investigate local adaptation. We found each of the regions formed their own distinct genetic clusters, some containing subpopulation structure. Most notably, we found that the Gulf of Alaska and eastern Bering Sea were significantly differentiated, something that had not been previously documented. Inbreeding in each region was low and not a concern for fisheries management. We found genetic patterns consistent with local adaptation on several chromosomes and one particularly strong signal on chromosome 100. At this locus, the Gulf of Alaska harbors distinct genetic variation that could facilitate local adaptation to their environment. Our findings support the current practice of managing red king crab at a regional scale, and they strongly favor sourcing broodstock from the target population if stock enhancement is considered to avoid genetic mismatch.
高纬度海洋盆地是地球上生产力最高的区域,支撑着具有经济和社会重要性的物种的高度多样性和生物量。长期以来负责任的渔业管理传统使这些物种得以世代延续,但气候变化、栖息地丧失和新捕捞技术带来的现代威胁正危及它们的生态系统以及依赖它们的人类社区。在这些物种中,阿拉斯加最具魅力的大型无脊椎动物——红帝王蟹,面临着所有这三种威胁,其分布的许多区域数量已大幅下降。管理者已确定种群结构和局部适应性是关键信息,有助于理解生物量下降情况以及如何通过监管和可能的种群增强措施来扭转这种局面。我们生成了来自五个区域的红帝王蟹的低覆盖度全基因组测序(lcWGS)数据:阿留申群岛、白令海东部、白令海北部、阿拉斯加湾和阿拉斯加东南部。我们利用lcWGS生成的数百万个遗传标记的数据,在之前使用少于100个标记的阿拉斯加种群结构研究基础上进行拓展,并研究局部适应性。我们发现每个区域都形成了各自独特的遗传簇,有些还包含亚种群结构。最值得注意的是,我们发现阿拉斯加湾和白令海东部存在显著差异,这是之前未曾记录过的。每个区域的近亲繁殖程度较低,并非渔业管理所担忧的问题。我们发现了与几个染色体上的局部适应性一致的遗传模式,在100号染色体上有一个特别强烈的信号。在这个位点,阿拉斯加湾拥有独特的遗传变异,这可能有助于其局部适应环境。我们的研究结果支持目前在区域尺度上管理红帝王蟹的做法,并且如果考虑进行种群增强,强烈建议从目标种群中获取亲鱼,以避免遗传不匹配。