AI Article Synopsis

  • Understanding the connectivity between endangered marine populations is crucial for their management and conservation, as factors like ocean conditions and species-specific traits influence how these populations interact.
  • In the study, researchers examined five species of Rockfish in Puget Sound using extensive genetic data, revealing distinct patterns of genetic differentiation influenced by both external and internal factors.
  • The findings highlighted that most Rockfish species displayed unique population structures, emphasizing the need for tailored management strategies instead of relying on generalized assumptions, like federal management boundaries, to effectively support recovery efforts.

Article Abstract

Quantifying connectivity between endangered or threatened marine populations is critical information for management and conservation, especially where abundance and productivity differ among such populations. Spatial patterns of such connectivity depend not only on extrinsic factors such as oceanography and bathymetry but also on intrinsic species-specific factors such as life history, demography and the location of glacial refugia. Nevertheless, population structure is often inferred from related or ecologically similar species. For example, the population structure in most rockfish species (Sebastes spp.) in the Salish Sea and the US West Coast is currently inferred from genetic data of three species that are known to hybridise in Puget Sound. Here, we determined the population structure and connectivity in five Puget Sound Rockfish species (Black [Sebastes melanops], Yellowtail [S. flavidus], Redstripe [S. proriger], Greenstriped [S. elongatus], and Puget Sound Rockfish [S. emphaeus]) from over 12,000 restriction-site associated DNA sequencing (RADseq) loci. We found species-specific patterns of genetic differentiation, attributable to both extrinsic and intrinsic factors. Specifically, Black and Puget Sound rockfishes showed no genetic differentiation; Yellowtail and Greenstriped rockfishes were structured according to known geographic barriers; and Redstripe Rockfish revealed evidence for temporal genetic differentiation, suggesting irregular recruitment influences population structure. Only Yellowtail Rockfish followed the federal DPS boundaries generally assumed for rockfish, further emphasizing the importance of species-specific management for the effective recovery and management of these rockfish populations and of marine species in general.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11665494PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/mec.17590DOI Listing

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