4.7 Article

Hierarchical genetic structure and implications for conservation of the world's largest salmonid, Hucho taimen

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-99530-3

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Taimen Fund
  2. Wild Salmon Center
  3. University of Nevada, Reno
  4. The Taimen Fund
  5. Taimen Conservation Fund

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Population genetic analyses of taimen indicate moderate nucleotide diversity despite population declines, with significant genetic differentiation among different drainages. Fine-scale structure was found within the Pacific drainages, suggesting potential for differentiation at different geographic scales. Further geographic and genomic sampling may be necessary for conservation and management of this iconic salmonid.
Population genetic analyses can evaluate how evolutionary processes shape diversity and inform conservation and management of imperiled species. Taimen (Hucho taimen), the world's largest freshwater salmonid, is threatened, endangered, or extirpated across much of its range due to anthropogenic activity including overfishing and habitat degradation. We generated genetic data using high throughput sequencing of reduced representation libraries for taimen from multiple drainages in Mongolia and Russia. Nucleotide diversity estimates were within the range documented in other salmonids, suggesting moderate diversity despite widespread population declines. Similar to other recent studies, our analyses revealed pronounced differentiation among the Arctic (Selenge) and Pacific (Amur and Tugur) drainages, suggesting historical isolation among these systems. However, we found evidence for finer-scale structure within the Pacific drainages, including unexpected differentiation between tributaries and the mainstem of the Tugur River. Differentiation across the Amur and Tugur basins together with coalescent-based demographic modeling suggests the ancestors of Tugur tributary taimen likely diverged in the eastern Amur basin, prior to eventual colonization of the Tugur basin. Our results suggest the potential for differentiation of taimen at different geographic scales, and suggest more thorough geographic and genomic sampling may be needed to inform conservation and management of this iconic salmonid.

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