Abstract
Sablefish (Anoplopoma fimbria) are in the suborder Cottioidei, which also includes stickleback and lumpfish. This species inhabits coastal regions of the northeastern and northwestern Pacific Ocean from California to Japan. A commercial fishery for sablefish began to flourish in the 1960s, though a downward trend in stock biomass and landings has been observed since 2010. Aquaculture protocols have been developed for sablefish; eggs and sperm from wild-caught and hatchery-reared captive broodstock are used to generate offspring that reach market size in about two years. Parentage analyses show that survival in aquaculture varies among families. Growth rate and disease resistance also vary among individuals and cohorts, but the extent to which genetics and the environment contribute to this variation is unclear. The sablefish genome assembly reported here will form the foundation for SNP-based surveys designed to detect genetic markers associated with survival, growth rate, and pathogen resistance. Beyond its contribution to sablefish domestication, the sablefish genome can be a resource for the management of the wild sablefish fishery. The assembly generated in this study had a length of 653 Mbp, a scaffold N50 of 26.74 Mbp, a contig N50 of 2.57 Mbp, and contained more than 98% of the 3640 Actinopterygii core genes. We placed 620.9 Mbp (95% of the total) onto 24 chromosomes using a genetic map derived from six full-sib families and Hi-C contact data.
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