TY - JOUR
T1 - Genetic evidence of local exploitation of atlantic salmon in a coastal subsistence fishery in the northwest atlantic
AU - Bradbury, Ian R.
AU - Hamilton, Lorraine C.
AU - Rafferty, Sara
AU - Meerburg, David
AU - Poole, Rebecca
AU - Brian Dempson, J.
AU - Robertson, Martha J.
AU - Reddin, David G.
AU - Bourret, Vincent
AU - Dionne, Mélanie
AU - Chaput, Gerald
AU - Sheehan, Timothy F.
AU - King, Timothy L.
AU - Candy, John R.
AU - Bernatchez, Louis
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015, National Research Council of Canada. All rigts reserved.
PY - 2014/9/18
Y1 - 2014/9/18
N2 - Fisheries targeting mixtures of populations risk the overutilization of minor stock constituents unless harvests are monitored and managed. We evaluated stock composition and exploitation of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) in a subsistence fishery in coastal Labrador, Canada, using genetic mixture analysis and individual assignment with a microsatellite baseline (15 loci, 11 829 individuals, 12 regional groups) encompassing the species’ western Atlantic range. Bayesian and maximum likelihood mixture analyses of fishery samples over 6 years (2006–2011; 1772 individuals) indicate contributions of adjacent stocks of 96%–97%. Estimates of fishery-associated exploitation were highest for Labrador salmon (4.2%–10.6% per year) and generally <1% for other regions. Individual assignment of fishery samples indicated nonlocal contributions to the fishery (e.g., Quebec, Newfoundland) were rare and primarily in southern Labrador, consistent with migration pathways utilizing the Strait of Belle Isle. This work illustrates how genetic analysis of mixed stock Atlantic salmon fisheries in the Northwest Atlantic using this new baseline can disentangle exploitation and reveal complex migratory behaviours.
AB - Fisheries targeting mixtures of populations risk the overutilization of minor stock constituents unless harvests are monitored and managed. We evaluated stock composition and exploitation of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) in a subsistence fishery in coastal Labrador, Canada, using genetic mixture analysis and individual assignment with a microsatellite baseline (15 loci, 11 829 individuals, 12 regional groups) encompassing the species’ western Atlantic range. Bayesian and maximum likelihood mixture analyses of fishery samples over 6 years (2006–2011; 1772 individuals) indicate contributions of adjacent stocks of 96%–97%. Estimates of fishery-associated exploitation were highest for Labrador salmon (4.2%–10.6% per year) and generally <1% for other regions. Individual assignment of fishery samples indicated nonlocal contributions to the fishery (e.g., Quebec, Newfoundland) were rare and primarily in southern Labrador, consistent with migration pathways utilizing the Strait of Belle Isle. This work illustrates how genetic analysis of mixed stock Atlantic salmon fisheries in the Northwest Atlantic using this new baseline can disentangle exploitation and reveal complex migratory behaviours.
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U2 - 10.1139/cjfas-2014-0058
DO - 10.1139/cjfas-2014-0058
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84912063743
SN - 0706-652X
VL - 72
SP - 83
EP - 95
JO - Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
JF - Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
IS - 1
ER -