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Harris, Les N.; Moore, Jean-Sébastien; Bajno, Robert; Tallman, Ross F. 2017-10-19 The Arctic Char Salvelinus alpinus is widely considered the most important subsistence fish species in the Canadian Arctic. Throughout the species’ range, commercial fisheries for Arctic Char also exist, the management of which primarily follows river-specific harvest strategies. Such an approach, however, may not be appropriate if the management unit or stock does not accurately reflect a demographically independent population or if mixtures of populations are being harvested. We assayed microsatellite DNA variation among 744 Arctic Char from the Cambridge Bay region, Nunavut, where the largest commercial fishery for the species exists, in order to identify the most appropriate spatial scale at which these stocks should be managed. Our sampling design specifically mirrored that of the commercial fishery in order to describe patterns of genetic structure and genetic variation within and among the harvested component. We also included Arctic Char from more geographically distant sampling locations to provide a spatial context for genetic stock structuring in the region. Overall, we found moderate but significant structure across the entire study area. In contrast, commercially harvested stocks were weakly differentiated, especially among the stocks that are considered part of the Wellington Bay complex. We propose several hypotheses for this weak differentiation, including (1) our sampling design that mirrored the commercial harvest, (2) high rates of potential gene flow, and (3) large effective population sizes. Our results may have important implications for commercial and subsistence fisheries management, including the notion that there are several potential units of conservation below the species level.
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Benestan, Laura; Moore, Jean-Sébastien; Sutherland, Ben J. G.; Le Luyer, Jérémy; Maaroufi, Halim; Rougeux, Clément; Normandeau, Eric; Rycroft, Nathan; Atema, Jelle; Harris, Les N.; Tallman, Ross F.; Greenwood, Spencer J.; Clark, K. Fraser; Bernatchez, Louis 2017-04-19 Using massively parallel sequencing data from two species with different life history traits, American lobster (Homarus americanus) and Arctic Char (Salvelinus alpinus), we highlight how an unbalanced sex ratio in the samples and a few sex-linked markers may lead to false interpretations of population structure and thus to potentially erroneous management recommendations. Here, multivariate analyses revealed two genetic clusters separating samples by sex instead of by expected spatial variation; inshore and offshore locations in lobster, or east and west locations in Arctic Char. To further investigate this, we created several subsamples artificially varying the sex ratio in the inshore/offshore and east/west groups, and then demonstrated that significant genetic differentiation could be observed despite panmixia in lobster, and that Fst values were overestimated in Arctic Char. This pattern was due to 12 and 94 sex-linked markers driving differentiation for lobster and Arctic Char, respectively. Removing sex-linked markers led to non-significant genetic structure in lobster and a more accurate estimation of Fst in Arctic Char. The locations of these markers and putative identities of genes containing, or nearby the markers were determined using available transcriptomic and genomic data, and this provided new information related to sex determination in both species. Given that only 9.6% of all marine/diadromous population genomic studies to date have reported sex information, we urge researchers to collect and consider individual sex information. Sex information is therefore relevant for avoiding unexpected biases due to sex-linked markers as well as for improving our knowledge of sex determination systems in non-model species.

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