TY - JOUR
T1 - High density SNP panel provides little evidence for population structure in European sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax) in waters surrounding the UK
AU - Taylor, Martin
AU - Lamb, Phillip
AU - Coscia, Ilaria
AU - Murray, David
AU - Brown, Mary
AU - Cameron, Tom
AU - Davison, Phil
AU - Freeman, Howard
AU - Georgiou, Katerina
AU - Grati, Fabio
AU - Haugen, Thrond
AU - Karachle, Paraskevi
AU - Kennedy, Richard
AU - Lanseers, Thomas
AU - Lincoln, Harriet
AU - Martinho, Filipe
AU - McCarthy, Ian
AU - Petroutsos, Spyros
AU - Pita, Pablo
AU - Oliveira Pontes, João Carlos
AU - Pujol, Marta
AU - Rangel, Mafalda
AU - Roche, William
AU - Sbragaglia, Valerio
AU - Sturrock, Anna
AU - Taylor, Michelle
AU - Wogerbauer, Ciara
AU - Viega, Pedro
AU - Weltersbach, Marc
AU - Hyder, Kieran
PY - 2025/5/14
Y1 - 2025/5/14
N2 - The European sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax) is a commercially and recreationally important fish widely, distributed across the Northeast Atlantic Ocean and Mediterranean Sea. Two distinct lineages that represent the Atlantic and Mediterranean regions have been previously identified, with a hybrid zone close to the Almeria–Oran front. The presence of fine-scale population structure within the Northeast Atlantic region is less clear. Here, we investigated population structure in adult samples obtained from the northern part of the Atlantic range surrounding the UK, Ireland, Belgium, Germany, France, the Netherlands, and Norway, along with outgroups from Portugal and the Mediterranean, using a panel of 41 K single nucleotide polymorphism markers. Population structure among Northeast Atlantic Ocean samples was weak in both spawning—(FST = 0.00022) and feeding—(FST = 0.00032) season data sets, with small pairwise FST values between sample pairs. However, average FST was larger between spawning samples than between feeding samples, with a pattern of isolation-by-distance among the spawning samples, but not the feeding samples, suggesting some biologically meaningful population structure. The largest pairwise FST values at both International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES) rectangle and division scales involved a sample from the west of Ireland. We found no evidence of a gradient in “Mediterranean” ancestry among samples collected around the UK in our data set or in a reanalysis of a published data set where such a pattern had been previously identified. In summary, there was no evidence that sea bass in different ICES divisions within the Northeast Atlantic Ocean represents genetically separate populations. Further work is required to reconcile evidence from tagging and modelling studies that suggest the potential for demographic independence with the genetic data.
AB - The European sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax) is a commercially and recreationally important fish widely, distributed across the Northeast Atlantic Ocean and Mediterranean Sea. Two distinct lineages that represent the Atlantic and Mediterranean regions have been previously identified, with a hybrid zone close to the Almeria–Oran front. The presence of fine-scale population structure within the Northeast Atlantic region is less clear. Here, we investigated population structure in adult samples obtained from the northern part of the Atlantic range surrounding the UK, Ireland, Belgium, Germany, France, the Netherlands, and Norway, along with outgroups from Portugal and the Mediterranean, using a panel of 41 K single nucleotide polymorphism markers. Population structure among Northeast Atlantic Ocean samples was weak in both spawning—(FST = 0.00022) and feeding—(FST = 0.00032) season data sets, with small pairwise FST values between sample pairs. However, average FST was larger between spawning samples than between feeding samples, with a pattern of isolation-by-distance among the spawning samples, but not the feeding samples, suggesting some biologically meaningful population structure. The largest pairwise FST values at both International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES) rectangle and division scales involved a sample from the west of Ireland. We found no evidence of a gradient in “Mediterranean” ancestry among samples collected around the UK in our data set or in a reanalysis of a published data set where such a pattern had been previously identified. In summary, there was no evidence that sea bass in different ICES divisions within the Northeast Atlantic Ocean represents genetically separate populations. Further work is required to reconcile evidence from tagging and modelling studies that suggest the potential for demographic independence with the genetic data.
KW - Fisheries
KW - SNPS
KW - Genetics
KW - sea bass
KW - population structure
KW - connectivity
U2 - 10.1093/icesjms/fsaf064
DO - 10.1093/icesjms/fsaf064
M3 - Article
SN - 1054-3139
VL - 82
JO - ICES Journal of Marine Science
JF - ICES Journal of Marine Science
IS - 5
M1 - fsaf064
ER -