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Population structure, long-term connectivity, and effective size of mutton snapper (Lutjanus analis) in the Caribbean Sea and Florida Keys

Carson, Evan W. and Saillant, Eric and Renshaw, Mark A. and Cummings, Nancie J. and Gold, John R. (2011) Population structure, long-term connectivity, and effective size of mutton snapper (Lutjanus analis) in the Caribbean Sea and Florida Keys. Fishery Bulletin, 109(4), pp. 416-428.

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    Abstract

    Genetic structure and average long-term connectivity and effective size of mutton snapper (Lutjanus analis) sampled from offshore localities in the U.S. Caribbean and the Florida Keys were assessed by using nuclear-encoded microsatellites and a fragment of mitochondrial DNA. No significant differences in allele, genotype (microsatellites), or haplotype (mtDNA) distributions were detected; tests of selective neutrality (mtDNA) were nonsignificant after Bonferroni correction. Heuristic estimates of average long-term rate of migration (proportion of migrant individuals/generation) between geographically adjacent localities varied from 0.0033 to 0.0054, indicating that local subpopulations could respond independently of environmental perturbations. Estimates of average longterm effective population sizes varied from 341 to 1066 and differed significantly among several of the localities. These results indicate that over time larval drift and interregional adult movement may not be sufficient to maintain population sustainability across the region and that there may be different demographic stocks at some of the localities studied. The estimate of long-term effective population size at the locality offshore of St. Croix was below the minimum threshold size considered necessary to maintain the equilibrium between the loss of adaptive genetic variance from genetic drift and its replacement by mutation. Genetic variability in mutton snapper likely is maintained at the intraregional level by aggregate spawning and random mating of local populations. This feature is perhaps ironic in that aggregate spawning also renders mutton snapper especially vulnerable to overexploitation.

    Item Type: Article
    Title: Population structure, long-term connectivity, and effective size of mutton snapper (Lutjanus analis) in the Caribbean Sea and Florida Keys
    Personal Creator/Author:
    CreatorsEmail
    Carson, Evan W.
    Saillant, Eric
    Renshaw, Mark A.
    Cummings, Nancie J.
    Gold, John R.
    Refereed: Yes
    Journal or Publication Title: Fishery Bulletin
    Volume: 109
    Number: 4
    Page Range: pp. 416-428
    Date: 2011
    ISSN: 0090-0656
    Issuing Agency: United States National Marine Fisheries Service
    Subjects: Biology
    Ecology
    Fisheries
    Item ID: 8701
    Depositing User: Patti M. Marraro
    Date Deposited: 07 Jun 2012 16:51
    Last Modified: 07 Jun 2012 16:51
    URI: http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/8701

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