TEMPORAL STABILITY OF MTDNA HAPLOTYPE FREQUENCIES IN AMERICAN SHAD STOCKS - TO POOL OR NOT TO POOL ACROSS YEARS

Citation
Bl. Brown et al., TEMPORAL STABILITY OF MTDNA HAPLOTYPE FREQUENCIES IN AMERICAN SHAD STOCKS - TO POOL OR NOT TO POOL ACROSS YEARS, Canadian journal of fisheries and aquatic sciences, 53(10), 1996, pp. 2274-2283
Citations number
42
Categorie Soggetti
Marine & Freshwater Biology",Fisheries
ISSN journal
0706652X
Volume
53
Issue
10
Year of publication
1996
Pages
2274 - 2283
Database
ISI
SICI code
0706-652X(1996)53:10<2274:TSOMHF>2.0.ZU;2-Y
Abstract
American shad (Alosa sapidissima) were collected in 1992 and 1993 at 1 9 sites along the North American Atlantic coast and assayed for mtDNA variation (N = 1888). chi(2) tests resulted in the pooling of two popu lation pairs, yielding 17 potential shad stocks. Sampling across years at a geographic location increased both the number of haplotypes obse rved and the number of singletons (haplotypes recorded in a single fis h) but the proportion of haplotypes that were singletons remained cons tant, regardless of sample size. chi(2) tests, analyses of molecular v ariance, and sample size considerations all indicated that the overall effect of temporal subsampling was negligible and pooling of successi ve yearly samples from the same location was warranted. When analyzing allocation success, higher informational returns were gained through sampling more fish using fewer (the best six or nine) restriction enzy mes than by sampling fewer fish using more enzymes. Allocation success was greater with 17 stocks (temporal subsamples pooled) than with 29 samples (subsamples separate), suggesting that a ''pool then allocate' ' strategy optimizes the accuracy of mixed-stock analysis. Cumulative findings of this and previous American shad studies reinforce the impo rtance of obtaining samples large enough to distinguish between low-fr equency polymorphisms, which are informative, and single-occurrence ha plotypes, which are not.