Population Genetics of the Teleost Orange Roughy, Hoplostethus Atlanticus, and Insights into their Visual Adaptations to the Deep-Sea Environment

The orange roughy, Hoplostethus atlanticus, has been one of the main targeted species in deep-sea fisheries worldwide. It occurs at depths of 450 – 1800 m and is abundant off the coasts of New Zealand, Australia, Namibia, Chile, and in the Northeast Atlantic Ocean. Like many other deep-sea fishes, o...

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Main Author: Varela Nayar, Andrea Isabel (11691298)
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.26686/wgtn.17003845.v1
id ftsmithonian:oai:figshare.com:article/17003845
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id ftsmithonian
language unknown
topic Biological Sciences not elsewhere classified
Molecular markers
Genetic structure
Critical amino acid replacements
School: School of Biological Sciences
069999 Biological Sciences not elsewhere classified
Marsden: 270203 Population and Ecological Genetics
Degree Discipline: Conservation Biology
Degree Level: Doctoral
Degree Name: Doctor of Philosophy
spellingShingle Biological Sciences not elsewhere classified
Molecular markers
Genetic structure
Critical amino acid replacements
School: School of Biological Sciences
069999 Biological Sciences not elsewhere classified
Marsden: 270203 Population and Ecological Genetics
Degree Discipline: Conservation Biology
Degree Level: Doctoral
Degree Name: Doctor of Philosophy
Varela Nayar, Andrea Isabel (11691298)
Population Genetics of the Teleost Orange Roughy, Hoplostethus Atlanticus, and Insights into their Visual Adaptations to the Deep-Sea Environment
topic_facet Biological Sciences not elsewhere classified
Molecular markers
Genetic structure
Critical amino acid replacements
School: School of Biological Sciences
069999 Biological Sciences not elsewhere classified
Marsden: 270203 Population and Ecological Genetics
Degree Discipline: Conservation Biology
Degree Level: Doctoral
Degree Name: Doctor of Philosophy
description The orange roughy, Hoplostethus atlanticus, has been one of the main targeted species in deep-sea fisheries worldwide. It occurs at depths of 450 – 1800 m and is abundant off the coasts of New Zealand, Australia, Namibia, Chile, and in the Northeast Atlantic Ocean. Like many other deep-sea fishes, orange roughy is vulnerable to over exploitation because they grow slow reaching maturity at about 30 years and live for more than 100 years. Their fecundity is low, which means they have low productivity. The individuals form predictable and dense spawning aggregations close to seamounts, plateaus and canyons. The trawl fishery for orange roughy started in seamounts around New Zealand in the late 1970s and progressively expanded off the coast of other countries and to the high seas (out of any Economic Exclusive Zone). Most stocks have been fished down to or below 30% pre-exploitation levels; as a consequence, fisheries have been closed or catches largely reduced. Currently, the only large scale fisheries operate off New Zealand. For effective fisheries management it is essential to define real biological units or “stocks”. There has been considerable research into the levels of population differentiation of orange roughy using a range of techniques at different geographic scales to attempt to differentiated stocks. However, there is no consensus about the level of connectivity among populations. In the present study, I investigated the levels of population differentiation in orange roughy using two types of neutral molecular markers at a global and fine-scales. Both markers revealed high levels of genetic diversity which is likely related with historically large population sizes. The analyses of 546 cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI) sequences revealed a lack of global genetic differentiation among samples from New Zealand, Australia, Namibia, and Chile. However, low but significant differentiation was found between the Southern hemisphere sites and two Northeast Atlantic sites. Mismatch distribution and Bayesian analyses indicated the occurrence of expansion events in orange roughy during the Pleistocene period. A data set of nine microsatellite DNA loci genotyped from 812 individuals, showed a predominant lack of significant genetic differentiation across the Tasman Sea and at a fine-scale around New Zealand. At a global scale, differentiation was low but significant across the Southern hemisphere; and the highest values of differentiation were detected between the Southern hemisphere sites and the Northeast Atlantic Ocean. The predominant lack of differentiation at the regional and fine-scale and the low differentiation within the Southern hemisphere is probably the result of stepping-stone dispersal of long-lived adults that are able to spawn many times in their life. Most orange roughy studies have been oriented to fisheries aspects, but other kind of studies as the genetic divergence and phylogenetic relationships among Hoplostethus species are lacking. Using available COI sequences, I conducted a phylogenetic study including H. atlanticus, H. crassispinus, H. gigas, H. japonicus H. latus, and H. mediterraneus. As expected, the inter species divergence was much higher than the intra species divergence. Phylogenetics analyses showed that H. latus, H. crassispinus, H. japonicus, and H. mediterraneus form a separate clade from H. atlanticus and H. gigas. The position of H. gigas was not well defined with the nucleotide data. However, at the amino acid level, non-synonymous substitutions differentiated H. atlanticus from all the other species. This was correlated with morphological characteristics presented elsewhere. A candidate gene approach was attemped using the rhodopsin gene; however, there was almost no variation among partial sequences of individuals from distant sites. Instead, this gene was used to investigate the molecular basis for visual adaptations in orange roughy to the bathypelagic light environment. It is known that certain amino acid replacements in the rhodopsin gene of vertebrates shift the λmax value of the pigment to perceive different light conditions. To compare and identify critical amino acid sites that are known to be involved in spectral tuning, I obtained partial rhodopsin sequences of other 18 marine teleost habiting at different depths (1 – 1,175 m) and, thus, different light environments. A phylogenetic analysis was conducted to determine whether particular rhodopsin gene sequences correlate with the depths occupied by the species. I identified four critical amino acid replacements that have been involved in the spectral tuning of rod pigments. Orange roughy presented the same amino acid combination at two critical sites already reported for the deep-sea congener silver roughy, which was not found in any of the other species. This likely reflects an adaptation to the light available (i.e. bioluminescence) in the bathypelagic environment. The phylogeny was weakly related to the maximum depth of the species, probably because there are selectively neutral (i.e. inherited by ancestry) and non-neutral changes (i.e. influenced by natural selection) among the rhodopsin sequences of the species being considered.
format Thesis
author Varela Nayar, Andrea Isabel (11691298)
author_facet Varela Nayar, Andrea Isabel (11691298)
author_sort Varela Nayar, Andrea Isabel (11691298)
title Population Genetics of the Teleost Orange Roughy, Hoplostethus Atlanticus, and Insights into their Visual Adaptations to the Deep-Sea Environment
title_short Population Genetics of the Teleost Orange Roughy, Hoplostethus Atlanticus, and Insights into their Visual Adaptations to the Deep-Sea Environment
title_full Population Genetics of the Teleost Orange Roughy, Hoplostethus Atlanticus, and Insights into their Visual Adaptations to the Deep-Sea Environment
title_fullStr Population Genetics of the Teleost Orange Roughy, Hoplostethus Atlanticus, and Insights into their Visual Adaptations to the Deep-Sea Environment
title_full_unstemmed Population Genetics of the Teleost Orange Roughy, Hoplostethus Atlanticus, and Insights into their Visual Adaptations to the Deep-Sea Environment
title_sort population genetics of the teleost orange roughy, hoplostethus atlanticus, and insights into their visual adaptations to the deep-sea environment
publishDate 2013
url https://doi.org/10.26686/wgtn.17003845.v1
long_lat ENVELOPE(66.067,66.067,-67.867,-67.867)
geographic New Zealand
Marsden
geographic_facet New Zealand
Marsden
genre Northeast Atlantic
genre_facet Northeast Atlantic
op_relation https://figshare.com/articles/thesis/Population_Genetics_of_the_Teleost_Orange_Roughy_Hoplostethus_Atlanticus_and_Insights_into_their_Visual_Adaptations_to_the_Deep-Sea_Environment/17003845
doi:10.26686/wgtn.17003845.v1
op_rights Author Retains Copyright
op_doi https://doi.org/10.26686/wgtn.17003845.v1
_version_ 1766143132774170624
spelling ftsmithonian:oai:figshare.com:article/17003845 2023-05-15T17:41:32+02:00 Population Genetics of the Teleost Orange Roughy, Hoplostethus Atlanticus, and Insights into their Visual Adaptations to the Deep-Sea Environment Varela Nayar, Andrea Isabel (11691298) 2013-01-01T00:00:00Z https://doi.org/10.26686/wgtn.17003845.v1 unknown https://figshare.com/articles/thesis/Population_Genetics_of_the_Teleost_Orange_Roughy_Hoplostethus_Atlanticus_and_Insights_into_their_Visual_Adaptations_to_the_Deep-Sea_Environment/17003845 doi:10.26686/wgtn.17003845.v1 Author Retains Copyright Biological Sciences not elsewhere classified Molecular markers Genetic structure Critical amino acid replacements School: School of Biological Sciences 069999 Biological Sciences not elsewhere classified Marsden: 270203 Population and Ecological Genetics Degree Discipline: Conservation Biology Degree Level: Doctoral Degree Name: Doctor of Philosophy Text Thesis 2013 ftsmithonian https://doi.org/10.26686/wgtn.17003845.v1 2021-12-19T21:58:54Z The orange roughy, Hoplostethus atlanticus, has been one of the main targeted species in deep-sea fisheries worldwide. It occurs at depths of 450 – 1800 m and is abundant off the coasts of New Zealand, Australia, Namibia, Chile, and in the Northeast Atlantic Ocean. Like many other deep-sea fishes, orange roughy is vulnerable to over exploitation because they grow slow reaching maturity at about 30 years and live for more than 100 years. Their fecundity is low, which means they have low productivity. The individuals form predictable and dense spawning aggregations close to seamounts, plateaus and canyons. The trawl fishery for orange roughy started in seamounts around New Zealand in the late 1970s and progressively expanded off the coast of other countries and to the high seas (out of any Economic Exclusive Zone). Most stocks have been fished down to or below 30% pre-exploitation levels; as a consequence, fisheries have been closed or catches largely reduced. Currently, the only large scale fisheries operate off New Zealand. For effective fisheries management it is essential to define real biological units or “stocks”. There has been considerable research into the levels of population differentiation of orange roughy using a range of techniques at different geographic scales to attempt to differentiated stocks. However, there is no consensus about the level of connectivity among populations. In the present study, I investigated the levels of population differentiation in orange roughy using two types of neutral molecular markers at a global and fine-scales. Both markers revealed high levels of genetic diversity which is likely related with historically large population sizes. The analyses of 546 cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI) sequences revealed a lack of global genetic differentiation among samples from New Zealand, Australia, Namibia, and Chile. However, low but significant differentiation was found between the Southern hemisphere sites and two Northeast Atlantic sites. Mismatch distribution and Bayesian analyses indicated the occurrence of expansion events in orange roughy during the Pleistocene period. A data set of nine microsatellite DNA loci genotyped from 812 individuals, showed a predominant lack of significant genetic differentiation across the Tasman Sea and at a fine-scale around New Zealand. At a global scale, differentiation was low but significant across the Southern hemisphere; and the highest values of differentiation were detected between the Southern hemisphere sites and the Northeast Atlantic Ocean. The predominant lack of differentiation at the regional and fine-scale and the low differentiation within the Southern hemisphere is probably the result of stepping-stone dispersal of long-lived adults that are able to spawn many times in their life. Most orange roughy studies have been oriented to fisheries aspects, but other kind of studies as the genetic divergence and phylogenetic relationships among Hoplostethus species are lacking. Using available COI sequences, I conducted a phylogenetic study including H. atlanticus, H. crassispinus, H. gigas, H. japonicus H. latus, and H. mediterraneus. As expected, the inter species divergence was much higher than the intra species divergence. Phylogenetics analyses showed that H. latus, H. crassispinus, H. japonicus, and H. mediterraneus form a separate clade from H. atlanticus and H. gigas. The position of H. gigas was not well defined with the nucleotide data. However, at the amino acid level, non-synonymous substitutions differentiated H. atlanticus from all the other species. This was correlated with morphological characteristics presented elsewhere. A candidate gene approach was attemped using the rhodopsin gene; however, there was almost no variation among partial sequences of individuals from distant sites. Instead, this gene was used to investigate the molecular basis for visual adaptations in orange roughy to the bathypelagic light environment. It is known that certain amino acid replacements in the rhodopsin gene of vertebrates shift the λmax value of the pigment to perceive different light conditions. To compare and identify critical amino acid sites that are known to be involved in spectral tuning, I obtained partial rhodopsin sequences of other 18 marine teleost habiting at different depths (1 – 1,175 m) and, thus, different light environments. A phylogenetic analysis was conducted to determine whether particular rhodopsin gene sequences correlate with the depths occupied by the species. I identified four critical amino acid replacements that have been involved in the spectral tuning of rod pigments. Orange roughy presented the same amino acid combination at two critical sites already reported for the deep-sea congener silver roughy, which was not found in any of the other species. This likely reflects an adaptation to the light available (i.e. bioluminescence) in the bathypelagic environment. The phylogeny was weakly related to the maximum depth of the species, probably because there are selectively neutral (i.e. inherited by ancestry) and non-neutral changes (i.e. influenced by natural selection) among the rhodopsin sequences of the species being considered. Thesis Northeast Atlantic Unknown New Zealand Marsden ENVELOPE(66.067,66.067,-67.867,-67.867)