Genetic structure and relatedness of brown trout ( Salmo trutta) populations in the drainage basin of the Ölfusá river, South-Western Iceland

Background Lake Þingvallavatn in Iceland, a part of the river Ölfusá drainage basin, was presumably populated by brown trout soon after it formed at the end of the last Ice Age. The genetic relatedness of the brown trout in Þingvallavatn to other populations in the Ölfusá drainage basin is unknown....

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:PeerJ
Main Authors: Lagunas, Marcos, Pálsson, Arnar, Jónsson, Benóný, Jóhannsson, Magnús, Jónsson, Zophonías O., Snorrason, Sigurður S.
Other Authors: Landsvirkjun Research Grant, University of Iceland Doctoral Research Grant
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: PeerJ 2023
Subjects:
Sog
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.15985
https://peerj.com/articles/15985.pdf
https://peerj.com/articles/15985.xml
https://peerj.com/articles/15985.html
Description
Summary:Background Lake Þingvallavatn in Iceland, a part of the river Ölfusá drainage basin, was presumably populated by brown trout soon after it formed at the end of the last Ice Age. The genetic relatedness of the brown trout in Þingvallavatn to other populations in the Ölfusá drainage basin is unknown. After the building of a dam at the outlet of the lake in 1959 brown trout catches declined, though numbers have now increased. The aim of this study was to assess effects of geographic isolation and potential downstream gene flow on the genetic structure and diversity in brown trout sampled in several locations in the western side of the watershed of River Ölfusá. We hypothesized that brown trout in Lake Þingvallavatn constituted several local spawning populations connected by occasional gene flow before the damming of the lake. We also estimated the effective population size (N E ) of some of these populations and tested for signs of a recent population bottleneck in Lake Þingvallavatn. Methods We sampled brown trout inhabiting four lakes and 12 rivers within and near the watershed of River Ölfusá by means of electro- and net- fishing. After stringent data filtering, 2,597 polymorphic loci obtained from ddRADseq data from 317 individuals were ascertained as putative neutral markers. Results Overall, the genetic relatedness of brown trout in the Ölfusá watershed reflected the connectivity and topography of the waterways. Ancestry proportion analyses and a phylogenetic tree revealed seven distinct clusters, some of which corresponded to small populations with reduced genetic diversity. There was no evidence of downstream gene flow from Lake Þingvallavatn, although gene flow was observed from much smaller mountain populations. Most locations showed low N E values ( i.e ., ~14.6 on average) while the putative anadromous trout from River Sog and the spawning population from River Öxará, that flows into Lake Þingvallavatn, showed notably higher N E values ( i.e ., 71.2 and 56.5, respectively). No signals of recent ...