Abstract

Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) is a species of great ecological and economical importance in the Baltic Sea. Here, two genetically differentiated stocks, the western and the eastern Baltic cod, display substantial mechanical mixing, hampering our understanding of cod ecology and impeding stock assessments and management. Based on whole-genome re-sequencing data from reference samples obtained from the study area, we designed two different panels of Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms markers (SNPs), which take into account the exceptional genome architecture of cod. A minimum panel of 20 diagnostic SNPs and an extended panel (20 diagnostic and 18 biologically informative SNPs, 38 in total) were developed and validated to distinguish unambiguously between the western and the eastern Baltic cod stocks and to enable studies of local adaptation to the specific environment in the Baltic Sea, respectively. We tested both panels on cod sampled from the southern Baltic Sea (n = 603) caught in 2015 and 2016. Genotyping results showed that catches from the mixing zone in the Arkona Sea, were composed of similar proportions of individuals of the western and the eastern stock. Catches from adjacent areas to the east, the Bornholm Basin and Gdańsk Deep, were exclusively composed of eastern Baltic cod, whereas catches from adjacent western areas (Belt Sea and Öresund) were composed of western Baltic cod. Interestingly, the two Baltic cod stocks showed strong genetic differences at loci associated with life-history trait candidate genes, highlighting the species’ potential for ecological adaptation even at small geographical scales. The minimum and the extended panel of SNP markers presented in this study provide powerful tools for future applications in research and fisheries management to further illuminate the mixing dynamics of cod in the Baltic Sea and to better understand Baltic cod ecology.

Highlights

  • In fisheries, management units are often not equivalent to biological populations or stock units

  • To determine the usefulness of the two assays containing diagnostic and biologically informative Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms markers (SNPs) to discriminate between Baltic cod populations, we genotyped individuals obtained from across the entire southern Baltic Sea

  • SNPs located in regions of large chromosomal rearrangements on linkage groups (LG) 2, 7 and 12 were less divergent

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Summary

Introduction

Management units are often not equivalent to biological populations or stock units. Traditional microsatellite analysis may lead to putatively false negatives in the identification of population structure due to methodological pitfalls, such as spuriously increased sample homozygosity caused by the presence of null alleles [5], or an overestimation of the accuracy of the markers [6]. Both effects hinder the correct genetic assignment of individuals

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