Genetic effects of marine stock enhancement: a case study based on the highly piscivorous Japanese Spanish mackerel

Author:

Nakajima Kaori1,Kitada Shuichi1,Habara Yoko1,Sano Shoko1,Yokoyama Emi1,Sugaya Takuma2,Iwamoto Akio3,Kishino Hirohisa4,Hamasaki Katsuyuki1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Marine Biosciences, Tokyo University of Marine Science and Technology, Tokyo 108-8477, Japan.

2. Momoshima Laboratory, National Research Institute of Fisheries and Environment of Inland Sea, Fisheries Research Agency, Hiroshima 722-0061, Japan.

3. National Research Institute of Aquaculture, Fisheries Research Agency, Mie 516-0193, Japan.

4. Graduate School of Agricultural and Life Sciences, University of Tokyo, Bunkyo, Tokyo 113-8657, Japan.

Abstract

We used a before–after control–impact design to quantify the genetic effects of the large piscivorous Japanese Spanish mackerel (Scomberomorus niphonius) stock enhancement program on wild populations in the Seto Inland Sea. Samples of 1424 wild and 230 hatchery fish collected from 13 sites around Japan were genotyped using five microsatellite markers. A total of 758 wild and 103 hatchery fish were sequenced for the mitochondrial DNA D-loop region. The population structure of Japanese Spanish mackerel was panmictic around Japan. Hatchery fish had significantly lower genetic diversity indices than did wild fish. However, there was no significant change in any of the diversity indices in the Seto Inland Sea, despite the substantial genetic mixing proportion of hatchery-origin genes (7.8%–14.5% from releases in 2001 and 2002), a conclusion supported by simulations. The estimated effective population size was surprisingly small (∼430–970) but stable in the Seto Inland Sea compared with the large census size. A Ryman–Laikre effect was not likely in the Japanese Spanish mackerel.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference77 articles.

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