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An Examination of the Utility of Large Genomic Datasets for Genetic Monitorng: An Atlantic Salmon (Salmo salar) Case Study

Date

2020-12-16T14:12:22Z

Authors

Watson, Kristin Bethany

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Abstract

Effective fisheries management requires an awareness of population demography and the spatial scale of population structuring, yet traditional approaches to quantifying both can be labour intensive and expensive. Here I explore the utility of large genomic datasets to characterize population structure, estimate effective population size, and monitor population status in Atlantic Salmon (Salmo salar) in Placentia Bay Newfoundland, Canada using a 220K SNP array. Population structure was linked to a temperature associated chromosomal polymorphism. Populations were small (N̂b < 350) and currently declining. Simulations suggested that large genomic datasets (≥ 100 microsatellites or ≥ 1000 SNPs) enabled accurate detection of population declines >30%. As such, I demonstrate that large genomic datasets allow the identification of fine-scale spatial structuring, the structuring forces involved, and provide a cost effective and accurate approach to monitor population status in the wild

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Keywords

Trans-Atlantic secondary contact, Chromosomal structural variation, Effective population size, Atlantic Salmon, Genetic monitoring, Large genomic dataset

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