Ancient DNA analysis of archaeological specimens extends Chinook salmon’s known historic range to San Francisco Bay’s tributaries and southernmost watershed

Author:

Lanman Richard B.ORCID,Hylkema Linda,Boone Cristie M.,Allée Brian,Castillo Roger O.,Moreno Stephanie A.ORCID,Flores Mary Faith,DeSilva Upuli,Bingham Brittany,Kemp Brian M.

Abstract

Understanding a species’ historic range guides contemporary management and habitat restoration. Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) are an important commercial and recreational gamefish, but nine Chinook subspecies are federally threatened or endangered due to anthropogenic impacts. Several San Francisco Bay Area streams and rivers currently host spawning Chinook populations, but government agencies consider these non-native hatchery strays. Through the morphology-based analysis of 17,288 fish specimens excavated from Native American middens at Mission Santa Clara (CA-SCL-30H), Santa Clara County, circa 1781–1834 CE, 88 salmonid vertebrae were identified. Ancient DNA sequencing identified three separate individuals as Chinook salmon and the remainder as steelhead/rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss). These findings comprise the first physical evidence of the nativity of salmon to the Guadalupe River in San Jose, California, extending their documented historic range to include San Francisco Bay’s southernmost tributary watershed.

Funder

Guadalupe Coyote Resource Conservation District

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference53 articles.

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4. John E. Skinner. An Historical Review of the Fish and Wildlife Resources of the San Francisco Bay Area. Sacramento, California: The Resources Agency of California Department of Fish and Game Water Projects Branch; 1962 Jun p. 226. Report No.: Water Projects Branch Report No. 1.

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