Published January 9, 2023 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Population genetics of Apostichopus californicus along the Northeastern Pacific Coast

  • 1. University of Washington

Description

A growing body of evidence suggests that spatial population structure can develop in marine species despite large population sizes and high gene flow. Characterizing population structure is important for the effective management of exploited species, as it can be used to identify appropriate scales of management in fishery and aquaculture contexts. The California sea cucumber, Apostichopus californicus, is one such exploited species whose management could benefit from further characterization of population structure. Using restriction site-associated DNA (RAD) sequencing, we developed 2,075 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) to quantify genetic structure over a broad section of the species' range along the North American west coast and within the Salish Sea, a region supporting the Washington State A. californicus fishery and developing aquaculture production of the species. We found evidence for population structure (global fixation index (FST) = 0.0068) with limited dispersal driving two patterns of differentiation: isolation-by-distance and a latitudinal gradient of differentiation. Notably, we found detectable population differences among collection sites within the Salish Sea (pairwise FST = 0.001–0.006). Using FST outlier detection and gene-environment association, we identified 10.2% of total SNPs as putatively adaptive. Environmental variables (e.g., temperature, salinity) from the sea surface were more correlated with genetic variation than those same variables measured near the benthos, suggesting that selection on pelagic larvae may drive adaptive differentiation to a greater degree than selection on adults. Our results were consistent with previous estimates of, and patterns in, population structure for this species in other extents of the range. Additionally, we found that patterns of neutral and adaptive differentiation co-varied, suggesting that adaptive barriers may limit dispersal. Our study provides guidance to decision-makers regarding the designation of management units for A. californicus and adds to the growing body of literature identifying genetic population differentiation in marine species despite large, nominally connected populations.

Notes

Raw data files (*.fastq) are too large to open, but can be accessed with Unix commands and dDocent, an open source pipeline for genotyping restriction site-associated DNA sequencing data.

R (e.g., packages adegenet and genepop) and text editors (e.g., Text Wrangler) can be used to open the genepop files and fasta files of putatively adaptive loci.

R (e.g., tidyverse), Microsoft Excel, and text editors (e.g., Text Wrangler) can be used to open the environ_data.csv file, containing environmental data from each collection site.

 

Funding provided by: National Marine Fisheries Service
Crossref Funder Registry ID: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100013408
Award Number: Sea Grant, Washington Sea Grant

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