Abstract

Macrobrachium rosenbergii, the giant freshwater prawn, is an important source of high quality protein and occurs naturally in rivers as well as commercial farms in South and South‐East Asia, including Bangladesh. This study investigated the genetic variation and population structure of M. rosenbergii sampled from four rivers in Bangladesh (sample size ranged from 19 to 20), assessing sequence variation, both in the mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase subunit 1 (CO1) gene and in 106 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) sampled randomly from the genome with double digest RAD sequencing (ddRADseq). The mitochondrial variation presented a shallow genealogy with high haplotype diversity (h = 0.95), reflecting an expansion in population size for the last ~82 kyr. Based on the CO1 variation the current effective population size (N e) was 9.7 × 106 (CI: 1.33 × 106 – 35.84 × 106) individuals. A significant population differentiation was observed with the mitochondrial CO1 sequence variation and based on the ddRADseq variation, which could be traced to the divergence of the population in the Naf River in the South‐East border with Myanmar from the other populations. A differentiation in mtDNA haplotype frequencies was also observed between the Biskhali River and the Karnaphuli Rivers in eastern Bangladesh. This study demonstrated the use of high‐throughput genotyping based on the ddRADseq method to reveal population structure at a small geographical scale for an important freshwater prawn. The information from this study can be utilized for management and conservation of this species in Bangladesh.

Highlights

  • Macrobrachium rosenbergii (De Man 1879; Decapoda, Palaemonidae), the giant freshwater prawn, is highly valued commercial aquaculture species

  • Concerns for the effects of wild prawn PL overfishing on coastal ecosystem biodiversity and production of other species caught as bycatch, led the Department of Fisheries (DOF) in Bangladesh to impose a ban in the year 2000 on wild prawn PL harvest (Ahmed & Troell, 2010; Department of Fisheries Bangladesh 2002)

  • Information about genetic population structure and connectivity of natural populations is important for sustainable harvest of populations and the management of diversity (Olsson et al, 2007)

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Macrobrachium rosenbergii (De Man 1879; Decapoda, Palaemonidae), the giant freshwater prawn, is highly valued commercial aquaculture species. The aim of this study was to investigate the genetic variation and population structure of M. rosenbergii within Bangladesh by assessing genomic variation in samples from four of its main rivers: the Bishkhali in the West, the Meghna, and the Karnaphuli in the East and the Naf River at the boundary with Myanmar in South-­East by applying more genetic markers than in a previous study by Khan et al (2014) and including other rivers This was carried out by analyzing geographical and historical patterns in mitochondrial DNA sequences and from double digest restriction-­site associated DNA sequence (ddRADseq; Peterson, Weber, Kay, Fisher, & Hoekstra, 2012) variation

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
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