Fish conservation in the land of steppe and sky: Evolutionarily significant units of threatened salmonid species in Mongolia mirror major river basins

Abstract Mongolia's salmonids are suffering extensive population declines; thus, more comprehensive fisheries management and conservation strategies are required. To assist with their development, a better understanding of the genetic structure and diversity of these threatened species would allow a more targeted approach for preserving genetic variation and ultimately improve long‐term species recoveries. It is hypothesized that the unfragmented river basins that have persisted across Mongolia provide unobstructed connectivity for resident salmonid species. Thus, genetic structure is expected to be primarily segregated between major river basins. We tested this hypothesis by investigating the population structure for three salmonid genera (Hucho, Brachymystax and Thymallus) using different genetic markers to identify evolutionarily significant units (ESUs) and priority rivers to focus conservation efforts. Fish were assigned to separate ESUs when the combined evidence of mitochondrial and nu‐clear data indicated genetic isolation. Hucho taimen exhibited a dichotomous population structure forming two ESUs, with five priority rivers. Within the Brachymystax genus, there were three B. lenok ESUs and one B. tumensis ESU, along with six priority rivers. While B. tumensis was confirmed to display divergent mtDNA haplotypes, haplotype sharing between these two congeneric species was also identified. For T. baicalensis, only a single ESU was assigned, with five priority rivers identified plus Lake Hovsgol. Additionally, we confirmed that T. nigrescens from Lake Hovsgol is a synonym of T. baicalensis. Across all species, the most prominent pattern was strong differentiation among major river basins with low differentiation and weak patterns of isolation by distance within river basins, which corroborated our hypothesis of high within‐basin connectivity across Mongolia. This new genetic information provides authorities the opportunity to distribute resources for management between ESUs while assigning additional protection for the more genetically valuable salmonid rivers so that the greatest adaptive potential within each species can be preserved.

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Kaus, Andrew, Michalski, Stefan, Hänfling, Bernd, Karthe, Daniel, Borchardt, Dietrich, Durka, Walter (2019). Dataset: Fish conservation in the land of steppe and sky: Evolutionarily significant units of threatened salmonid species in Mongolia mirror major river basins. https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.899882

DOI retrieved: 2019

Additional Info

Field Value
Imported on November 30, 2024
Last update November 30, 2024
License CC-BY-NC-ND-4.0
Source https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.899882
Author Kaus, Andrew
Given Name Andrew
Family Name Kaus
More Authors
Michalski, Stefan
Hänfling, Bernd
Karthe, Daniel
Borchardt, Dietrich
Durka, Walter
Source Creation 2019
Publication Year 2019
Resource Type text/tab-separated-values - filename: Kaus-etal_2019
Subject Areas
Name: Ecology

Related Identifiers
Title: Fish conservation in the land of steppe and sky: Evolutionarily significant units of threatened salmonid species in Mongolia mirror major river basins
Identifier: https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.4974
Type: DOI
Relation: IsSupplementTo
Year: 2019
Source: Ecology and Evolution
Authors: Kaus Andrew , Michalski Stefan , Hänfling Bernd , Karthe Daniel , Borchardt Dietrich , Durka Walter .