4.7 Article

Resurrecting an extinct salmon evolutionarily significant unit: archived scales, historical DNA and implications for restoration

Journal

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
Volume 21, Issue 7, Pages 1567-1582

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-294X.2011.05419.x

Keywords

evolutionarily significant unit; kokanee; microsatellite DNA; Oncorhynchus nerka; population extinction; re-introduction

Funding

  1. Northwest Fisheries Science Center

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Archival scales from 603 sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka), sampled from May to July 1924 in the lower Columbia River, were analysed for genetic variability at 12 microsatellite loci and compared to 17 present-day O.nerka populationsexhibiting either anadromous (sockeye salmon) or nonanadromous (kokanee) life historiesfrom throughout the Columbia River Basin, including areas upstream of impassable dams built subsequent to 1924. Statistical analyses identified four major genetic assemblages of sockeye salmon in the 1924 samples. Two of these putative historical groupings were found to be genetically similar to extant evolutionarily significant units (ESUs) in the Okanogan and Wenatchee Rivers (pairwise FST = 0.004 and 0.002, respectively), and assignment tests were able to allocate 77% of the fish in these two historical groupings to the contemporary Okanogan River and Lake Wenatchee ESUs. A third historical genetic grouping was most closely aligned with contemporary sockeye salmon in Redfish Lake, Idaho, although the association was less robust (pairwise FST = 0.060). However, a fourth genetic grouping did not appear to be related to any contemporary sockeye salmon or kokanee population, assigned poorly to the O.nerka baseline, and had distinctive early return migration timing, suggesting that this group represents a historical ESU originating in headwater lakes in British Columbia that was probably extirpated sometime after 1924. The lack of a contemporary O.nerka population possessing the genetic legacy of this extinct ESU indicates that efforts to reestablish early-migrating sockeye salmon to the headwater lakes region of the Columbia River will be difficult.

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