Genomic testing of landlocked Kildin cod ( Gadus morhua kildinensis) for its ancestral state: stationary or migratory ecotype?

Kildin cod is a small landlocked population of Atlantic cod reproductively isolated from marine counterparts for around 1500-2000 years. The Kildin cod lives in a shallow meromictic lake in the five-meter intermediate layer of water with sharp gradients of oxygen and salinity. The cod had an effecti...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Teterina, Anastasia A, Zhivotovsky, Lev A
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: PeerJ 2016
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Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.7287/peerj.preprints.2497v1
https://peerj.com/preprints/2497v1.pdf
https://peerj.com/preprints/2497v1.xml
https://peerj.com/preprints/2497v1.html
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Summary:Kildin cod is a small landlocked population of Atlantic cod reproductively isolated from marine counterparts for around 1500-2000 years. The Kildin cod lives in a shallow meromictic lake in the five-meter intermediate layer of water with sharp gradients of oxygen and salinity. The cod had an effective population size of around one hundred individuals and evolved unique physiological, morphological and behavioral features. The marine Atlantic cod has two ecologically distinct forms: the stationary (coastal) and migratory (deep-water) ecotypes that differ in migratory behavior and habitat preferences (the depth, oxygen content, salinity and temperature). To understand the origin and genetic properties of Kildin cod, we scrutinized genomic regions associated with the cod ecotypes differentiation (LG1, LG2, and LG7) and found out that Kildin cod’s regions LG2 and LG7 were fixed with the migratory variants, whereas polymorphic LG1 had a higher frequency of the stationary variant, that could be explained by the possible strong genetic drift. The lake cod investigated had four times lesser genome diversity than marine population. Our finding suggests that Kildin cod originated from the migratory ecotype of the marine cod.