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Evaluating genetic traceability methods for captive-bred marine fish and their applications in fisheries management and wildlife forensics. / Bylemans, Jonas; Maes, Gregory E.; Diopere, Eveine et al.
Yn: Aquaculture Environment Interactions, Cyfrol 8, 25.02.2016, t. 131-145.

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HarvardHarvard

Bylemans, J, Maes, GE, Diopere, E, Cariani, A, Senn, H, Taylor, MI, Helyar, S, Bargelloni, L, Bonaldo, A, Carvalho, G, Guarniero, I, Komen, H, Martinsohn, JT, Nielsen, EE, Tinti, F, Volckaert, FAM & Ogden, R 2016, 'Evaluating genetic traceability methods for captive-bred marine fish and their applications in fisheries management and wildlife forensics', Aquaculture Environment Interactions, cyfrol. 8, tt. 131-145. https://doi.org/10.3354/aei00164

APA

Bylemans, J., Maes, G. E., Diopere, E., Cariani, A., Senn, H., Taylor, M. I., Helyar, S., Bargelloni, L., Bonaldo, A., Carvalho, G., Guarniero, I., Komen, H., Martinsohn, J. T., Nielsen, E. E., Tinti, F., Volckaert, F. A. M., & Ogden, R. (2016). Evaluating genetic traceability methods for captive-bred marine fish and their applications in fisheries management and wildlife forensics. Aquaculture Environment Interactions, 8, 131-145. https://doi.org/10.3354/aei00164

CBE

Bylemans J, Maes GE, Diopere E, Cariani A, Senn H, Taylor MI, Helyar S, Bargelloni L, Bonaldo A, Carvalho G, et al. 2016. Evaluating genetic traceability methods for captive-bred marine fish and their applications in fisheries management and wildlife forensics. Aquaculture Environment Interactions. 8:131-145. https://doi.org/10.3354/aei00164

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Bylemans J, Maes GE, Diopere E, Cariani A, Senn H, Taylor MI et al. Evaluating genetic traceability methods for captive-bred marine fish and their applications in fisheries management and wildlife forensics. Aquaculture Environment Interactions. 2016 Chw 25;8:131-145. doi: 10.3354/aei00164

Author

Bylemans, Jonas ; Maes, Gregory E. ; Diopere, Eveine et al. / Evaluating genetic traceability methods for captive-bred marine fish and their applications in fisheries management and wildlife forensics. Yn: Aquaculture Environment Interactions. 2016 ; Cyfrol 8. tt. 131-145.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Evaluating genetic traceability methods for captive-bred marine fish and their applications in fisheries management and wildlife forensics

AU - Bylemans, Jonas

AU - Maes, Gregory E.

AU - Diopere, Eveine

AU - Cariani, Alessia

AU - Senn, Helen

AU - Taylor, Martin I.

AU - Helyar, Sarah

AU - Bargelloni, Luca

AU - Bonaldo, Alessio

AU - Carvalho, Gary

AU - Guarniero, Ilaria

AU - Komen, Hans

AU - Martinsohn, Jann Th.

AU - Nielsen, Einar E.

AU - Tinti, Fausto

AU - Volckaert, Filip A.M.

AU - Ogden, Rob

N1 - Research was funded by the European Commission Joint Research Centre (JRC) through the AQUAGEN project (https://aquagen.jrc.ec.europa.eu; tender No. IPSC_2010_04_11_NC) and benefited from the EU FP7 project FishPopTrace (KBBE-2007-212399) and Aqua- race (KBBE-311920). E.D. and G.E.M. were funded by the Research Foundation-Flanders (FWO-Vlaanderen)

PY - 2016/2/25

Y1 - 2016/2/25

N2 - Growing demands for marine fish products is leading to increased pressure on already depleted wild populations and a rise in aquaculture production. Consequently, more captive-bred fish are released into the wild through accidental escape or deliberate releases. The increased mixing of captive-bred and wild fish may affect the ecological and/or genetic integrity of wild fish populations. Unambiguous identification tools for captive-bred fish will be highly valuable to manage risks (fisheries management) and tracing of escapees and seafood products (wildlife forensics). Using single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) data from captive-bred and wild populations of Atlantic cod Gadus morhua L. and sole Solea solea L., we explored the efficiency of population and parentage assignment techniques for the identification and tracing of captive-bred fish. Simulated and empirical data were used to correct for stochastic genetic effects. Overall, parentage assignment performed well when a large effective population size characterized the broodstock and escapees originated from early generations of captive breeding. Consequently, parentage assignments are particularly useful from a fisheries management perspective to monitor the effects of deliberate releases of captive-bred fish on wild populations. Population assignment proved to be more efficient after several generations of captive breeding, which makes it a useful method in forensic applications for well-established aquaculture species. We suggest the implementation of a case-by-case strategy when choosing the best method.

AB - Growing demands for marine fish products is leading to increased pressure on already depleted wild populations and a rise in aquaculture production. Consequently, more captive-bred fish are released into the wild through accidental escape or deliberate releases. The increased mixing of captive-bred and wild fish may affect the ecological and/or genetic integrity of wild fish populations. Unambiguous identification tools for captive-bred fish will be highly valuable to manage risks (fisheries management) and tracing of escapees and seafood products (wildlife forensics). Using single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) data from captive-bred and wild populations of Atlantic cod Gadus morhua L. and sole Solea solea L., we explored the efficiency of population and parentage assignment techniques for the identification and tracing of captive-bred fish. Simulated and empirical data were used to correct for stochastic genetic effects. Overall, parentage assignment performed well when a large effective population size characterized the broodstock and escapees originated from early generations of captive breeding. Consequently, parentage assignments are particularly useful from a fisheries management perspective to monitor the effects of deliberate releases of captive-bred fish on wild populations. Population assignment proved to be more efficient after several generations of captive breeding, which makes it a useful method in forensic applications for well-established aquaculture species. We suggest the implementation of a case-by-case strategy when choosing the best method.

U2 - 10.3354/aei00164

DO - 10.3354/aei00164

M3 - Article

VL - 8

SP - 131

EP - 145

JO - Aquaculture Environment Interactions

JF - Aquaculture Environment Interactions

SN - 1869-7534

ER -