Genetic population structure of introduced and native lineages of kokanee in a large impounded watershed

Author:

Breault Paige W.1ORCID,Wetklo Mike2,Langston Arne R.3,Zemlak Randy J.4,Withler Ruth E.2,Shrimpton J. Mark1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Ecosystem Science and Management (Biology) Department University of Northern British Columbia Prince George British Columbia Canada

2. Fisheries and Oceans Canada, Pacific Biological Station, Molecular Genetics Laboratory Nanaimo British Columbia Canada

3. BC Hydro Vernon British Columbia Canada

4. BC Hydro Prince George British Columbia Canada

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveThe kokanee Oncorhynchus nerka (nonanadromous life‐history form of Sockeye Salmon) uses lacustrine habitat in watersheds draining into the north Pacific Ocean. Kokanee also have been widely introduced into reservoirs following impoundment of rivers consequent to the construction of hydroelectric dams. Genetically divergent subpopulations of kokanee should be identified and evaluated when implementing watershed‐level fishery management strategies.MethodsWe analyzed the genetic population structure of kokanee in the Williston watershed, north‐central British Columbia, where native populations were present in the reservoir and headwater lakes prior to stocking Columbia River‐origin fish in the 1990s using microsatellite markers.ResultWe determined that native Williston Reservoir kokanee were divergent from only one of the headwater lake populations. Native populations in headwater lakes remain entirely separate from the reservoir populations, and there was no indication of past or current introgression with the introduced stock. We identified all fish collected from 2006 to 2019 as introduced Columbia River‐origin genotypes, and there was no evidence of genetic divergence by spawning location.ConclusionAs native Williston kokanee have not been sampled from the reservoir in survey efforts since 2000, it is likely that this population has been extirpated from the reservoir perhaps through competition with the introduced Columbia River‐origin lineage.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference74 articles.

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3. First record of kokanee salmon, Oncorhynchus nerka, in Great Slave Lake, Northwest Territories;Babaluk J. A.;The Canadian Field‐Naturalist,2000

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5. Barrett D. T. &Halsey T. G.(1985).Fisheries resources and fisheries potential of Williston Reservoir and its tributary streams: Volume 1.Fisheries resources and fisheries potential of Williston Reservoir(Fisheries Technical Circular No. 68). British Columbia Ministry of Environment.https://www.for.gov.bc.ca/hfd/library/Fisheries/FTC68.pdf

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