Intact genetic structure and high levels of genetic
diversity in bottlenecked sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka)
populations of the Fraser River, British Columbia, Canada
Ruth E. Withler, Khai D. Le, R. John Nelson, Kristina M. Miller, and Terry D.
Beacham
Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci./J. Can. Sci. Halieut. Aquat. 57(10): 1985-1998 (2000)
Abstract: Analysis
of six microsatellite loci in 5800 sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka)
from 29 Fraser River populations provided little evidence of genetic
bottlenecks or mass straying in upper Fraser sockeye salmon resulting from
reduced abundances following 1913-1914 rockslides in the Fraser canyon and
successive decades of high exploitation. Upper Fraser populations were not
characterized by a paucity of rare alleles, a sensitive indicator of
populations in which effective size has been recently reduced. Heterozygosity
and allelic diversity did not differ consistently between lower and upper
Fraser populations. Throughout the watershed, early-migrating populations had
lower allelic diversity and a lower proportion of rare alleles than did
late-migrating ones. Genetic differentiation between upper and lower Fraser
populations and heterogeneity among lower Fraser populations supported the
suggestion that Fraser sockeye salmon are descendants of at least two
postglacial "races." Variation among lakes within regions was the
strongest component of genetic structure, accounting for five times the
variation among populations within lakes and more than two times the variation
among regions. Extensive historical transplants of eggs and juveniles
apparently resulted in little gene flow among regions, but three populations
were reestablished or rebuilt as the result of more recent transplants.