Genetic connectivity and hybridization with its siter species challenge the current management paradigm of white anglerfish (Lophius piscatorius)

Understanding the inter and intraspecific dynamics of fish populations is essential to promote effective management and conservation actions and to predict adaptation to changing conditions. This is possible through the analysis of thousands of genetic markers, which has proven useful to resolve con...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Aguirre-Sarabia, I. (Imanol), Díaz-Arce, N. (Natalia), Pereda-Agirre, I. (Iker), Mendibil, I. (Iñaki), Urtizberea, A. (Agurtzane), Gerritsen, H.D. (Hans D.), Burns, F. (Finlay), Holmes, I. (Ian), Landa, J. (Jorge), Coscia, I. (Ilaria), Quincoces, I. (Iñaki), Santurtún, M. (Marina), Zanzi, A. (Antonella), Martinsohn, J.T. (Jann T.), Rodríguez-Ezpeleta, N. (Naiara)
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: Centro Oceanográfico de Santander 2021
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10508/12021
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Summary:Understanding the inter and intraspecific dynamics of fish populations is essential to promote effective management and conservation actions and to predict adaptation to changing conditions. This is possible through the analysis of thousands of genetic markers, which has proven useful to resolve connectivity among populations. Here, we have tackled this issue in the white anglerfish (Lophius piscatorius), which inhabits the Northeast Atlantic and Mediterranean Sea and coexists with its morphologically almost identical sister species, the black anglerfish (L. budegassa). Our genetic analyses based on 16,000 SNP markers and 700 samples reveal that i) the white anglerfish from the Mediterranean Sea and the Atlantic Ocean are genetically isolated, but that no differentiation can be observed within the later, and that ii) black and white anglerfish naturally hybridize, resulting in a population of about 20% of, most likely sterile, hybrids in some areas. These findings challenge the current paradigm of white anglerfish management, which considers three independent management units within the North East Atlantic and assumes that all mature fish have reproductive potential. Additionally, the northwards distribution of both species, likely due to temperature raises, calls for further monitoring of the abundance and distribution of hybrids to anticipate the effects of climate change in the interactions between both species and their potential resilience.