Data from: Assessing conservation risks to populations of an anadromous Arctic salmonid, the northern Dolly Varden (Salvelinus malma malma), via estimates of effective and census population sizes and approximate Bayesian computation

AbstractCensus population size (Nc) is crucial to the development of resource management strategies, however, monitoring the effective population size (Ne) of managed populations has proliferated because of this parameter’s relationship to the short-term impacts of genetic stochasticity and long-ter...

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Main Authors: Harris, Les N., Palstra, Friso P., Bajno, Rob, Gallagher, Colin P., Howland, Kimberly L., Taylor, Eric B., Reist, James D., Bajno, Robert
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Borealis 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:dd7a6167f9a50c8af57428092b0d3984a6fc7ef94b03716b388066fcd9f54c4d
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author Harris, Les N.
Palstra, Friso P.
Bajno, Rob
Gallagher, Colin P.
Howland, Kimberly L.
Taylor, Eric B.
Reist, James D.
Bajno, Robert
author_facet Harris, Les N.
Palstra, Friso P.
Bajno, Rob
Gallagher, Colin P.
Howland, Kimberly L.
Taylor, Eric B.
Reist, James D.
Bajno, Robert
author_sort Harris, Les N.
collection Borealis (via DataONE)
description AbstractCensus population size (Nc) is crucial to the development of resource management strategies, however, monitoring the effective population size (Ne) of managed populations has proliferated because of this parameter’s relationship to the short-term impacts of genetic stochasticity and long-term population viability. Thus, having a sound understanding of both Nc and Ne, including population connectivity, provides valuable insights into both the demographic and genetic risks to extinction. Here, we assessed microsatellite DNA variation in four (of five known) anadromous northern Dolly Varden (NDV, Salvelinus malma malma) populations from Canada’s western Arctic region, to estimate Ne using both temporal-based and single-sample estimators and to test for associations between Ne and Nc. We also employed approximate Bayesian computation (ABC) to evaluate several evolutionary scenarios that have potentially shaped contemporary population structure in this species, focusing particularly on population size and connectivity. We found evidence for moderate to large contemporary and historical Ne, suggesting that short- and long-term extinction risks are low for these populations. Estimates of contemporary and long-term Ne were variable within and among populations and overall estimates could not be reliably linked with Nc or available spawning habitat. The overall estimate of Ne/Nc, was 0.152 and ranged from 0.024 to 0.442 when including errors around the estimate of Ne and Nc. Finally, ABC analyses suggest that NDV had a common origin followed by divergence in isolation while maintaining large effective sizes, but also that these populations were bottlenecked in the past, likely the result of post-glacial colonization processes. These results corroborate indications of limited gene flow at present, indicating independent demographic and evolutionary trajectories that imply NDV is best managed on a per-river-population basis. Overall, the results of this study further our general understanding of Ne, Ne/Nc and demographic independence in NDV, and provide a comprehensive and quantitative assessment of the potential genetic and demographic risk status of Arctic anadromous salmonids, including baselines for future monitoring., Usage notes3D Genepop FileGenepop file (3 digit) containing raw microsatellite data used for all analyses.Genepop 3 Digit
format Dataset
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
geographic Arctic
Varden
geographic_facet Arctic
Varden
id dataone:sha256:dd7a6167f9a50c8af57428092b0d3984a6fc7ef94b03716b388066fcd9f54c4d
institution Open Polar
language unknown
long_lat ENVELOPE(7.656,7.656,62.534,62.534)
op_collection_id dataone:urn:node:BOREALIS
publishDate 2021
publisher Borealis
record_format openpolar
spelling dataone:sha256:dd7a6167f9a50c8af57428092b0d3984a6fc7ef94b03716b388066fcd9f54c4d 2025-06-03T18:49:28+00:00 Data from: Assessing conservation risks to populations of an anadromous Arctic salmonid, the northern Dolly Varden (Salvelinus malma malma), via estimates of effective and census population sizes and approximate Bayesian computation Harris, Les N. Palstra, Friso P. Bajno, Rob Gallagher, Colin P. Howland, Kimberly L. Taylor, Eric B. Reist, James D. Bajno, Robert 2021-05-19T00:00:00Z https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:dd7a6167f9a50c8af57428092b0d3984a6fc7ef94b03716b388066fcd9f54c4d unknown Borealis conservation effective population size Salvelinus malma malma Census population size Other Northern Dolly Varden 1980s-present Dataset 2021 dataone:urn:node:BOREALIS 2025-06-03T18:18:01Z AbstractCensus population size (Nc) is crucial to the development of resource management strategies, however, monitoring the effective population size (Ne) of managed populations has proliferated because of this parameter’s relationship to the short-term impacts of genetic stochasticity and long-term population viability. Thus, having a sound understanding of both Nc and Ne, including population connectivity, provides valuable insights into both the demographic and genetic risks to extinction. Here, we assessed microsatellite DNA variation in four (of five known) anadromous northern Dolly Varden (NDV, Salvelinus malma malma) populations from Canada’s western Arctic region, to estimate Ne using both temporal-based and single-sample estimators and to test for associations between Ne and Nc. We also employed approximate Bayesian computation (ABC) to evaluate several evolutionary scenarios that have potentially shaped contemporary population structure in this species, focusing particularly on population size and connectivity. We found evidence for moderate to large contemporary and historical Ne, suggesting that short- and long-term extinction risks are low for these populations. Estimates of contemporary and long-term Ne were variable within and among populations and overall estimates could not be reliably linked with Nc or available spawning habitat. The overall estimate of Ne/Nc, was 0.152 and ranged from 0.024 to 0.442 when including errors around the estimate of Ne and Nc. Finally, ABC analyses suggest that NDV had a common origin followed by divergence in isolation while maintaining large effective sizes, but also that these populations were bottlenecked in the past, likely the result of post-glacial colonization processes. These results corroborate indications of limited gene flow at present, indicating independent demographic and evolutionary trajectories that imply NDV is best managed on a per-river-population basis. Overall, the results of this study further our general understanding of Ne, Ne/Nc and demographic independence in NDV, and provide a comprehensive and quantitative assessment of the potential genetic and demographic risk status of Arctic anadromous salmonids, including baselines for future monitoring., Usage notes3D Genepop FileGenepop file (3 digit) containing raw microsatellite data used for all analyses.Genepop 3 Digit Dataset Arctic Borealis (via DataONE) Arctic Varden ENVELOPE(7.656,7.656,62.534,62.534)
spellingShingle conservation
effective population size
Salvelinus malma malma
Census population size
Other
Northern Dolly Varden
1980s-present
Harris, Les N.
Palstra, Friso P.
Bajno, Rob
Gallagher, Colin P.
Howland, Kimberly L.
Taylor, Eric B.
Reist, James D.
Bajno, Robert
Data from: Assessing conservation risks to populations of an anadromous Arctic salmonid, the northern Dolly Varden (Salvelinus malma malma), via estimates of effective and census population sizes and approximate Bayesian computation
title Data from: Assessing conservation risks to populations of an anadromous Arctic salmonid, the northern Dolly Varden (Salvelinus malma malma), via estimates of effective and census population sizes and approximate Bayesian computation
title_full Data from: Assessing conservation risks to populations of an anadromous Arctic salmonid, the northern Dolly Varden (Salvelinus malma malma), via estimates of effective and census population sizes and approximate Bayesian computation
title_fullStr Data from: Assessing conservation risks to populations of an anadromous Arctic salmonid, the northern Dolly Varden (Salvelinus malma malma), via estimates of effective and census population sizes and approximate Bayesian computation
title_full_unstemmed Data from: Assessing conservation risks to populations of an anadromous Arctic salmonid, the northern Dolly Varden (Salvelinus malma malma), via estimates of effective and census population sizes and approximate Bayesian computation
title_short Data from: Assessing conservation risks to populations of an anadromous Arctic salmonid, the northern Dolly Varden (Salvelinus malma malma), via estimates of effective and census population sizes and approximate Bayesian computation
title_sort data from: assessing conservation risks to populations of an anadromous arctic salmonid, the northern dolly varden (salvelinus malma malma), via estimates of effective and census population sizes and approximate bayesian computation
topic conservation
effective population size
Salvelinus malma malma
Census population size
Other
Northern Dolly Varden
1980s-present
topic_facet conservation
effective population size
Salvelinus malma malma
Census population size
Other
Northern Dolly Varden
1980s-present
url https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:dd7a6167f9a50c8af57428092b0d3984a6fc7ef94b03716b388066fcd9f54c4d