| Literature DB >> 27050440 |
Dorte Bekkevold1, Riho Gross2, Timo Arula3, Sarah J Helyar4, Henn Ojaveer3.
Abstract
Herring, Clupea harengus, is one of the ecologically and commercially most important species in European northern seas, where two distinct ecotypes have been described based on spawning time; spring and autumn. To date, it is unknown if these spring and autumn spawning herring constitute genetically distinct units. We assessed levels of genetic divergence between spring and autumn spawning herring in the Baltic Sea using two types of DNA markers, microsatellites and Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms, and compared the results with data for autumn spawning North Sea herring. Temporally replicated analyses reveal clear genetic differences between ecotypes and hence support reproductive isolation. Loci showing non-neutral behaviour, so-called outlier loci, show convergence between autumn spawning herring from demographically disjoint populations, potentially reflecting selective processes associated with autumn spawning ecotypes. The abundance and exploitation of the two ecotypes have varied strongly over space and time in the Baltic Sea, where autumn spawners have faced strong depression for decades. The results therefore have practical implications by highlighting the need for specific management of these co-occurring ecotypes to meet requirements for sustainable exploitation and ensure optimal livelihood for coastal communities.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27050440 PMCID: PMC4822851 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0148499
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Clupea harengus sampling locations in the Gulf of Riga (inset) and adjacent areas in the Baltic Sea and the North Sea.
Numbers show sampling locations for respectively 1. Pärnu Bay, 2. Kihnu Island, and 3. Saaremaa. Four stars show origin of collections from [14].
C. harengus samples in the analysis.
Numbers of genotyped fish; numbers in brackets show numbers of fish per sample in pre-spawning stage (i.e. non-spawning).
| Location | Sample size (# non-spawning) | Collection date | Spawning type | Markers typed (M = micro, S = SNP) | Latitude/longitude |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pärnu Bay | 48 (4) | 24.04.2014 | Spring | S,M | 58° 17,195’ N/24° 21,967’ E |
| 48 (1) | 30.04.2014 | Spring | S,M | 58° 16,139’ N/24° 26,337’ E | |
| Kihnu | 48 (1) | 11.09.2014 | Autumn | S,M | 58° 02,253’ N/23° 50,320’ E |
| 48 (9) | 01.10.2014 | Autumn | S,M | 58° 01,697’ N/23° 50,199’ E | |
| Saaremaa | 48 (0) | 03.09.2014 | Autumn | S,M | 58° 02,253’ N/23° 50,320’ E |
| 48 (2) | 18.09.2014 | Autumn | S,M | 58° 02,253’ N/23° 50,320’ E | |
| Bothnian Bay | 30 (NA) | Jun-2009 | Spring/summer | S | 65° 02’37.75 N/24° 45’13.17 E |
| Gulf of Finland | 23 (NA) | May-2009 | Spring | S | 60° 10’01.54 N/25° 37’14.67 E |
| C North Sea, Banks | 30 (NA) | Aug-2009 | Autumn | S | 56° 29’31.16 N/0° 33’32.15 E |
| N North Sea, Shetland | 30 (NA) | Aug-2009 | Autumn | S | 60° 04’34.07 N/1° 25’17.88 W |
§ Data from [14].
Pairwise differentiation (ϴ, above diagonal) and P-values for Fisher’s tests for differentiation (below diagonal) for SNP and microsatellite markers combined.
Statistically significant divergence following FDR correction is shown in bold. SS and AS indicate spawning in respectively spring and autumn.
| Pärnu Bay 1 | Pärnu Bay 2 | Kihnu 1 | Kihnu 2 | Saaremaa 1 | Saaremaa 2 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pärnu Bay 1 24.04.2014 (SS) | 0.0022 | |||||
| Pärnu Bay 2 30.04.2014 (SS) | 0.2342 | |||||
| Kihnu 1 11.09.2014 (AS) | <0.0001 | <0.0001 | 0.0014 | 0.0027 | 0.0000 | |
| Kihnu 2 01.10.2014 (AS) | <0.0001 | <0.0001 | 0.5462 | 0.0053 | 0.0016 | |
| Saaremaa 1 03.09.2014 (AS) | <0.0001 | <0.0001 | 0.3599 | 0.3544 | 0.0031 | |
| Saaremaa 2 18.09.2014 (AS) | <0.0001 | <0.0001 | 0.0519 | 0.7336 | 0.2072 |
Fig 2Locus specific differentiation across six GoR samples.
Global differentiation (Weir-Cockerham’s ϴ) for 18 microsatellite (dark grey bars) and 95 SNP (open bars) loci ranked by ϴ. Hatched bars indicate SNP loci identified as selected outliers in [14] and asterisks above bars indicate three loci identified as outliers in this study. See S1 Table for locus ID. Global ϴ across loci and samples was 0.0066.
Fig 3Genotypes form three ecotype associated clusters strongly driven by outlier loci.
(A) DAPC clustering for the first two principal components (PCs) explaining 98% of the variation. Filled black dots: Baltic Sea AS; open circles: Baltic Sea SS; grey triangles: North Sea AS. See Table 1 for sample details. (B) proportion of variation contributed to PC1 (grey bars) and PC2 (open bars) by individual loci. Outlier loci are indicated by vertical arrows.