Single nucleotide polymorphisms to discriminate different classes of hybrid between wild Atlantic salmon and aquaculture escapees
Atlantic salmon
570
0303 health sciences
03 medical and health sciences
ta1184
Salmo salar
aquaculture escapee
ta1181
Original Articles
14. Life underwater
allelotyping
630
DOI:
10.1111/eva.12407
Publication Date:
2016-07-09T14:52:59Z
AUTHORS (7)
ABSTRACT
AbstractMany wild Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) populations are threatened by introgressive hybridization from domesticated fish that have escaped from aquaculture facilities. A detailed understanding of the hybridization dynamics between wild salmon and aquaculture escapees requires discrimination of different hybrid classes; however, markers currently available to discriminate the two types of parental genome have limited power to do this. Using a high‐density Atlantic salmon single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) array, in combination with pooled‐sample allelotyping and an Fst outlier approach, we identified 200 SNPs that differentiated an important Atlantic salmon stock from the escapees potentially hybridizing with it. By simulating multiple generations of wild–escapee hybridization, involving wild populations in two major phylogeographic lineages and a genetically diverse set of escapees, we showed that both the complete set of SNPs and smaller subsets could reliably assign individuals to different hybrid classes up to the third hybrid (F3) generation. This set of markers will be a useful tool for investigating the genetic interactions between native wild fish and aquaculture escapees in many Atlantic salmon populations.
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