Abstract

Eulachon (Thaleichthys pacificus), a culturally and ecologically important anadromous smelt (Family Osmeridae), ranges from Northern California to the southeast Bering Sea. In recent decades, some populations have experienced declines. Here we use a contig-level genome assembly combined with previously published restriction site-associated DNA sequencing (RADseq)-derived markers to construct an amplicon panel for eulachon. Using this panel, we develop a filtered genetic baseline of 521 variant loci genotyped in 1989 individuals from 14 populations ranging from Northern California through central Alaska. Consistent with prior genetic studies, the strongest separation occurs among three main regions: from Northern California up to and including the Fraser River; north of the Fraser River to southeast Alaska; and within the Gulf of Alaska. Separating the Fraser River from southern US populations and refining additional substructure within the central coast may be possible in mixed-stock analysis; this will be addressed in future work. The amplicon panel outperformed the previous microsatellite panel and thus will be used in future mixed-stock analyses of eulachon to provide new insights for management and conservation of eulachon.

Highlights

  • Distribution: In Alaska, eulachon are seasonally abundant in several drainages from Southeast, west to the Copper River Delta and become less abundant westward out to the Pribilof Islands in the Bering Sea

  • The name eulachon is derived from the Chinook language of the Pacific Northwest native peoples and has several variations, hooligan being commonly used in Alaska

  • Eulachon are generally blue-silver in color in salt water, turning to gray-brown and green when moving into fresh water at spawning time

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Summary

Introduction

Distribution: In Alaska, eulachon are seasonally abundant in several drainages from Southeast, west to the Copper River Delta and become less abundant westward out to the Pribilof Islands in the Bering Sea. The eulachon (Thaleichthys pacificus (Girad)), called hooligan, is one of seven species of the smelt (Family: Osmeridae) found in Alaska. The name eulachon is derived from the Chinook language of the Pacific Northwest native peoples and has several variations, hooligan being commonly used in Alaska. Eulachon are generally blue-silver in color in salt water, turning to gray-brown and green when moving into fresh water at spawning time.

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