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- Title
Can we rely on selected genetic markers for population identification? Evidence from coastal Atlantic cod.
- Authors
Jorde, Per Erik; Synnes, Ann‐Elin; Espeland, Sigurd Heiberg; Sodeland, Marte; Knutsen, Halvor
- Abstract
The use of genetic markers under putative selection in population studies carries the potential for erroneous identification of populations and misassignment of individuals to population of origin. Selected markers are nevertheless attractive, especially in marine organisms that are characterized by weak population structure at neutral loci. Highly fecund species may tolerate the cost of strong selective mortality during early life stages, potentially leading to a shift in offspring genotypes away from the parental proportions. In Atlantic cod, recent genetic studies have uncovered different genotype clusters apparently representing phenotypically cryptic populations that coexist in coastal waters. Here, we tested if a high‐graded SNP panel specifically designed to classify individual cod to population of origin may be unreliable because of natural selection acting on the SNPs or their linked background. Temporal samples of cod were collected from two fjords, starting at the earliest life stage (pelagic eggs) and carried on until late autumn (bottom‐settled juveniles), covering the period during summer of high natural mortality. Despite the potential for selective mortality during the study period, we found no evidence for selection, as both cod types occurred throughout the season, already in the earliest egg samples, and there was no evidence for a shift during the season in the proportions of one or the other type. We conclude that high‐graded marker panels under putative natural selection represent a valid and useful tool for identifying biological population structure in this highly fecund species and presumably in others. The use of genetic markers under putative selection in population studies carries the potential for erroneous identification of populations and misassignment of individuals to population of origin. We analyzed this problem in coastal Atlantic cod by screening temporal samples for genotypes from a high‐graded SNP panel specifically designed to separate putative cod populations. Despite sampling over early life stages with high natural mortality, and thus potential for selection, we found no evidence for selection distorting population assignment in this species.
- Subjects
ATLANTIC cod; GENETIC markers; FISH populations; FISH mortality; FISH genetics
- Publication
Ecology & Evolution (20457758), 2018, Vol 8, Issue 24, p12547
- ISSN
2045-7758
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1002/ece3.4648