Genomics and 20 years of sampling reveal phenotypic differences between subpopulations of outmigrating Central Valley Chinook salmon

Author:

Thompson Tasha Q.12ORCID,O'Leary Shannon13ORCID,O'Rourke Sean4,Tarsa Charlene15,Baerwald Melinda R.6,Goertler Pascale67,Meek Mariah H.18ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Michigan State University East Lansing Michigan USA

2. Wild Salmon Center Portland Oregon USA

3. Saint Anselm College Manchester New Hampshire USA

4. University of California Davis California USA

5. Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies Millbrook New York USA

6. California Department of Water Resources Sacramento California USA

7. Delta Stewardship Council Sacramento California USA

8. The Wilderness Society Bozeman Montana USA

Abstract

AbstractIntraspecific diversity plays a critical role in the resilience of Chinook salmon populations. California's Central Valley (CV) historically hosted one of the most diverse population complexes of Chinook salmon in the world. However, anthropogenic factors have dramatically decreased this diversity, with severe consequences for population resilience. Here we use next generation sequencing and an archive of thousands of tissue samples collected across two decades during the juvenile outmigration to evaluate phenotypic diversity between and within populations of CV Chinook salmon. To account for highly heterogeneous sample qualities in the archive dataset, we develop and test an approach for population and subpopulation assignments of CV Chinook salmon that allows inclusion of relatively low‐quality samples while controlling error rates. We find significantly distinct outmigration timing and body size distributions for each population and subpopulation. Within the archive dataset, spring run individuals that assigned to the Mill and Deer Creeks subpopulation exhibited an earlier and broader outmigration distribution as well as larger body sizes than individuals that assigned to the Butte Creek subpopulation. Within the fall run population, individuals that assigned to the late‐fall run subpopulation also exhibited an earlier and broader outmigration distribution and larger body sizes than other fall run fish in our dataset. These results highlight the importance of distinct subpopulations for maintaining remaining diversity in CV Chinook salmon, and demonstrates the power of genomics‐based population assignments to aid the study and management of intraspecific diversity.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference71 articles.

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3. AzatJ.2023.GrandTab 2023.06.26. California Central Valley Population Database Report.California Department of Fish and Wildlife. [accessed 2024 Jan 09]. Available from:https://nrm.dfg.ca.gov/FileHandler.ashx?DocumentID=84381&inline

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