4.6 Article

Genomic evidence of recent European introgression into North American farmed and wild Atlantic salmon

Journal

EVOLUTIONARY APPLICATIONS
Volume 15, Issue 9, Pages 1436-1448

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/eva.13454

Keywords

aquaculture; Atlantic salmon; European ancestry; genetic; hybridization; management

Funding

  1. Norwegian Ministry for Trade, Industry and Fisheries
  2. Research Council of Norway [200510]
  3. Genomics Research and Development Initiative of Canada
  4. Program for Aquaculture Regulatory Research of Fisheries and Oceans Canada

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Gene flow between wild and domestic populations has been demonstrated in various species. This study found evidence of European gene introgression into North American aquaculture salmon, despite the absence of approval for the use of European salmon in Canada. The results suggest that individuals with European ancestry have been used and escaped into the wild, potentially impacting wild salmon populations.
Gene flow between wild and domestic populations has been repeatedly demonstrated across a diverse range of taxa. Ultimately, the genetic impacts of gene flow from domestic into wild populations depend both on the degree of domestication and the original source of the domesticated population. Atlantic salmon, Salm solar, used in North American aquaculture are ostensibly of North American origin. However, evidence of European introgression into North American aquaculture salmon has accumulated in recent decades, even though the use of diploid European salmon has never been approved in Canada. The full extent of such introgression as well as the potential impacts on wild salmon in the Northwest Atlantic remains uncertain. Here, we extend previous work comparing North American and European wild salmon (n = 5799) using a 220K SNP array to quantify levels of recent European introgression into samples of domestic salmon, aquaculture escapees, and wild salmon collected throughout Atlantic Canada. Analysis of North American farmed salmon (n = 403) and escapees (n = 289) displayed significantly elevated levels of European ancestry by comparison with wild individuals (p <0.001). Of North American farmed salmon sampled between 2011 and 2018, similar to 17% had more than 10% European ancestry and several individuals exceeded 40% European ancestry. Samples of escaped farmed salmon similarly displayed elevated levels of European ancestry, with two individuals classified as 100% European. Analysis of juvenile salmon collected in rivers proximate to aquaculture locations also revealed evidence of elevated European ancestry and larger admixture tract in comparison to individuals collected at distance from aquaculture. Overall, our results demonstrate that even though diploid European salmon have never been approved for use in Canada, individuals of full and partial European ancestry have been in use over the last decade, and that some of these individuals have escaped and hybridized in the wild.

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