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Discriminating Among Pacific Salmon, Rainbow Trout, and Atlantic Salmon Species Using Common Genetic Screening Methods

Authors :
Christian T. Smith
Wesley A. Larson
Andrew W. Barclay
Christopher Habicht
Keith Turnquist
Heather A. Hoyt
Source :
Journal of Fish and Wildlife Management. 10:228-240
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, 2019.

Abstract

The five most common species of Pacific salmon, Rainbow Trout (steelhead) Oncorhynchus spp., and Atlantic Salmon Salmo salar intermingle in the North Pacific Ocean and its freshwater tributaries. Efficient morphological methods for distinguishing among these species are sometimes limited by condition of the specimen (degraded or missing morphology), life history stage, or training of the observer. Researchers have successfully applied various genetic methods to distinguish among these species when morphological analyses are not possible, but they cannot easily incorporate these methods into standard fish and wildlife population monitoring analysis workflows. Here we test five 5′–3′ exonuclease (TaqMan) assays developed from mitochondrial genes and provide novel methods that take advantage of TaqMan output to distinguish among these species. We found that combinations of as few as two of the five assays were adequate to distinguish all species. TaqMan chemistry is designed to interrogate a single nucleotide locus. We also explore the basis for the variation in the observed scatter plot distributions (variation in florescent signals) and show that this variation is due to nucleotide diversity in and near the probe site. Because the SNPs underlying the assays developed here are all physically close to one another along the mitochondrial genome, the potential exists to develop a single DNA sequence-based assay to discriminate among salmon species. This single assay can be added to a genotyping-by-sequencing panel to identify and exclude nontarget species from analyses.

Details

ISSN :
1944687X
Volume :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Fish and Wildlife Management
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........3ce0da6864d81cfb22d5095646baaf6d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3996/052018-jfwm-038