Abstract

Intense and prolonged mortality caused by over-exploitation could drive the decay of genetic diversity which may lead to decrease species’ resilience to environmental changes, thus increasing their extinction risk. Swordfish is a high commercial value species, especially in the Mediterranean Sea, where it is affected by high catch levels. Mediterranean swordfish consist of a population genetically and biologically distinct from Atlantic ones and therefore managed as a separate stock. The last Mediterranean swordfish stock assessment reported that in the last forty years Mediterranean swordfish has been overfished and, to date, it is still subject to overfishing. A comparison between an available mitochondrial sequence dataset and a homologous current sample was carried out to investigate temporal genetic variation in the Mediterranean swordfish population over near twenty years. Our study provides the first direct measure of reduced genetic diversity for Mediterranean swordfish during a short period, as measured both in the direct loss of mitochondrial haplotypes and reduction in haplotype diversity. A reduction of the relative females’ effective population size in the recent sample has been also detected. The possible relationship between fishery activities and the loss of genetic diversity in the Mediterranean swordfish population is discussed.

Highlights

  • The swordfish (Xiphias gladius) is a large pelagic and migratory fish found in the open waters of all oceans, including the Mediterranean Sea [1]

  • Mediterranean swordfish consist of a population genetically and biologically distinct from the Atlantic one

  • The sequencing of all individuals belonging to the Clade II corroborated the SSCP profile interpretation

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The swordfish (Xiphias gladius) is a large pelagic and migratory fish found in the open waters of all oceans, including the Mediterranean Sea [1]. Adults swordfish migrate for reproductive reasons to spawning grounds, while a diel pattern in vertical movement occurring for feeding, reaching deep water (300–600 m) during daylight and staying closer to the sea-surface during the night [2,3]. The growth parameters are different, and the sexual maturity is reached at younger ages than in the Atlantic [4]. In the Mediterranean, the estimated size at which 50% (L50 ) of the female population is mature occurs from 131.5 cm [5] and 140 cm [6], corresponding to 3–4-year-old fish [2]. Males reach sexual maturity at smaller sizes and mature specimens have been found at about

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call