Abstract

Anthropogenic acidification in SW‐Scotland, from the early 19th Century onwards, led to the extinction of several loch (lake) brown trout (Salmo trutta) populations and substantial reductions in numbers in many others. Higher altitude populations with no stocking influence, which are isolated above natural and artificial barriers and subjected to the greatest effect of acidification, exhibited the least intrapopulation genetic diversity (34% of the allelic richness of the populations accessible to anadromous S. trutta). These, however, were characterised by the greatest interpopulation divergence (highest pairwise D EST 0.61 and F ST 0.53 in contemporary samples) based on 16 microsatellite loci and are among the most differentiated S. trutta populations in NW‐Europe. Five lochs above impassable waterfalls, where S. trutta were thought to be extinct, are documented as having been stocked in the late 1980s or 1990s. All five lochs now support self‐sustaining S. trutta populations; three as a direct result of restoration stocking and two adjoining lochs largely arising from a small remnant wild population in one, but with some stocking input. The genetically unique Loch Grannoch S. trutta, which has been shown to have a heritable increased tolerance to acid conditions, was successfully used as a donor stock to restore populations in two acidic lochs. Loch Fleet S. trutta, which were re‐established from four separate donor sources in the late 1980s, showed differential contribution from these ancestors and a higher genetic diversity than all 17 natural loch populations examined in the area. Genetically distinct inlet and outlet spawning S. trutta populations were found in this loch. Three genetically distinct sympatric populations of S. trutta were identified in Loch Grannoch, most likely representing recruitment from the three main spawning rivers. A distinct genetic signature of Loch Leven S. trutta, the progenitor of many Scottish farm strains, facilitated detection of stocking with these strains. One artificially created loch was shown to have a population genetically very similar to Loch Leven S. trutta. In spite of recorded historical supplemental stocking with Loch Leven derived farm strains, much of the indigenous S. trutta genetic diversity in the area remains intact, aside from the effects of acidification induced bottlenecks. Overall genetic diversity and extant populations have been increased by allochthonous stocking.

Highlights

  • Worldwide, many salmonid populations have become extirpated (Hendry et al, 2003), largely as a result of anthropogenic causes

  • Loch Fleet S. trutta, which were re-established from four separate donor sources in the late 1980s, showed differential contribution from these ancestors and a higher genetic diversity than all 17 natural loch populations examined in the area

  • Restoration stocking failures can occur because the original factors that led to the extinction still exist, or due to random demographic fluctuations (Moritz, 1999)

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Many salmonid populations have become extirpated (Hendry et al, 2003), largely as a result of anthropogenic causes. The diverse landscape ecology, water chemistry and anthropogenic influences, including stocking, of south-west Scotland make it an important and ideal area for studying the effect of these factors on the population genetics of S. trutta, which is a UK Biodiversity Action Plan priority species (JNCC, 2010). The main inter-linked objectives of this study were to determine: (a) the effect of acidification on the contemporary intra and interpopulation genetic diversity and population structure; (b) if restoration stocking has resulted in self-sustaining populations in lochs where S. trutta were considered extinct and the relative success of different strategies for reintroduction; (c) to what extent has stocking with Loch Leven based farm strains resulted in introgression into natural populations; (d) if sympatric sub-structuring occurs within any of the loch S. trutta stocks and how this has evolved; (e) key populations in south-west Scotland of high conservation or scientific value

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
| RESULTS
| DISCUSSION
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