| Literature DB >> 26711352 |
Carlo Pecoraro1, Massimiliano Babbucci2, Adriana Villamor3, Rafaella Franch4, Chiara Papetti5, Bruno Leroy6, Sofia Ortega-Garcia7, Jeff Muir8, Jay Rooker9, Freddy Arocha10, Hilario Murua11, Iker Zudaire12, Emmanuel Chassot13, Nathalie Bodin14, Fausto Tinti15, Luca Bargelloni16, Alessia Cariani17.
Abstract
Global population genetic structure of yellowfin tuna (Thunnus albacares) is still poorly understood despite its relevance for the tuna fishery industry. Low levels of genetic differentiation among oceans speak in favour of the existence of a single panmictic population worldwide of this highly migratory fish. However, recent studies indicated genetic structuring at a much smaller geographic scales than previously considered, pointing out that YFT population genetic structure has not been properly assessed so far. In this study, we demonstrated for the first time, the utility of 2b-RAD genotyping technique for investigating population genetic diversity and differentiation in high gene-flow species. Running de novo pipeline in Stacks, a total of 6772 high-quality genome-wide SNPs were identified across Atlantic, Indian and Pacific population samples representing all major distribution areas. Preliminary analyses showed shallow but significant population structure among oceans (FST=0.0273; P-value<0.01). Discriminant Analysis of Principal Components endorsed the presence of genetically discrete yellowfin tuna populations among three oceanic pools. Although such evidence needs to be corroborated by increasing sample size, these results showed the efficiency of this genotyping technique in assessing genetic divergence in a marine fish with high dispersal potential.Entities:
Keywords: Marine fish; Population genomics; RAD sequencing; SNP; Tropical tuna; Tuna fishery
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26711352 DOI: 10.1016/j.margen.2015.12.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mar Genomics ISSN: 1874-7787 Impact factor: 1.710