Abstract

Geographic variation in minisatellite DNA variation was examined in 18 stocks of coho salmon Oncorhynchus kisutch from British Columbia and three stocks from Kamchatka or Western Alaska. Genomic DNA was restricted with Mbo I or Hae III and hybridized with two minisatellite probes (pSsa‐A34, Ots PBS‐1). Allele frequencies and DNA band counts derived from the two probes were combined with band counts from the probe Ssa to show a regional stock structure. In British Columbia, stocks from the Fraser River were distinct from those on Vancouver Island, and all were differentiated from those on the mainland of British Columbia. Average heterozygosity at the Ssa‐A34 locus was 71%. Compared with a previous study of British Columbia coho salmon population structure in which variation at 26 allozyme loci was examined, greater population differentiation and higher heterozygosity were observed at minisatellite loci. Estimated stock compositions of simulated mixtures of fishery samples from British Columbia stocks were accurate and precise, with the potential of identifying stocks within the drainage basin of a major river, the Fraser River. Minisatellite DNA variation may provide accurate and precise estimates of stock composition in actual fishery applications, and has the potential of identifying individual fish to region or stock of origin.

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