Abstract

The commercially important species Lutjanus campechanus (Northern/Gulf red snapper) and Lutjanus purpureus (Southern/Caribbean red snapper) are the protagonists of a decade’s long taxonomic debate over their species delimitation, due in part to partial habitat overlap, extensive morphological similarity, and the lack of resolution when applying canonically reliable DNA barcoding approaches. In this study, we leveraged publicly available RAD-Seq data for L. campechanus and L. purpureus to identify species-informative single‐nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) at the genome scale that were successful in distinguishing the Northern and Southern red snappers, while also detecting individuals exhibiting introgression. This 4-step empirical approach demonstrates the value of applying novel bioinformatics pipelines to existing genome-scale data to maximize the distillation of informative subsets. Our results facilitate economically relevant species identification in addition to confirming or challenging species identifications for specimens with data in public databases. These findings and their applications will benefit future sustainability strategies and broader research questions surrounding these overfished and evolutionarily entangled snapper species.

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