Management and conservation implications of cryptic population substructure for two commercially exploited fishes (Merluccius spp.) in southern Africa

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Authors

Forde, Sarah
Von der Heyden, Sophie
Le Moan, Alan
Nielsen, Erica S.
Durholtz, Deon
Kainge, Paulus
Kathena, Johannes N.
Lipinski, Marek R.
Ndjaula, Hilkka O.N.
Matthee, Conrad A.

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Wiley

Abstract

Genomic information can aid in the establishment of sustainable management plans for commercially exploited marine fishes, aiding in the long-term conservation of these resources. The southern African hakes (Merluccius capensis and M. paradoxus) are commercially valuable demersal fishes with similar distribution ranges but exhibiting contrasting life histories. Using a comparative framework based on Pool-Seq genome-wide SNP data, we investigated whether the evolutionary processes that shaped extant patterns of diversity and divergence are shared among these two congeneric fishes, or unique to each one. Our findings revealed that M. capensis and M. paradoxus show similar levels of genome-wide diversity, despite different census sizes and life-history features. In addition, M. capensis shows three highly structured geographic populations across the Benguela Current region (one in the northern Benguela and two in the southern Benguela), with no consistent genome–environment associations detected. In contrast, although population structure and outlier analyses suggested panmixia for M. paradoxus, reconstruction of its demographic history suggested the presence of an Atlantic–Indian Ocean subtle substructuring pattern. Therefore, it appears that M. paradoxus might be composed by two highly connected populations, one in the Atlantic and one in the southwest Indian Ocean. The reported similar low levels of genomic diversity, as well as newly discovered genetically distinct populations in both hake species can thus assist in informing and improving conservation and management plans for the commercially important southern African Merluccius.

Description

DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT : The code used in this manuscript is supplied as Data S1. Genomic data (raw reads) as well as filtered sync files are available in DRYAD (https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.sn02v6x8n).

Keywords

Conservation genomics, Fisheries management, Genomic diversity, Pool-Seq, Population dynamics, SDG-14: Life below water, Merluccius capensis, Shallow-water Cape hake (Merluccius capensis), Merluccius paradoxus, Deep-water Cape hake (Merluccius paradoxus)

Sustainable Development Goals

SDG-14:Life below water

Citation

Forde, S., von der Heyden, S., Le Moan, A., Nielsen, E. S., Durholtz, D., Kainge, P., Kathena, J. N., Lipinski, M. R., Ndjaula, H. O. N., Matthee, C. A., & Henriques, R. (2023). Management and conservation implications of cryptic population substructure for two commercially exploited fishes (Merluccius spp.) in southern Africa. Molecular Ecology Resources, vol. 25, no. 5, pp. 1-17, . https://doi.org/10.1111/1755-0998.13820.