Long-lived marine species may be resilient to environmental variability
through a temporal portfolio effect
Abstract
Maintenance of a portfolio of adaptive alleles may provide resilience of
populations to natural environmental variability. We used Pacific ocean
perch (POP; Sebastes alutus) to test for the maintenance of adaptive
variation across overlapping generations. POP are a long-lived species
characterized by widespread larval dispersal in their first year and a
longevity of over 100 years. In order to understand how early marine
dispersal affects POP survival and population structure, we used
Restriction Site Associated DNA sequencing (RADseq) to obtain 11,146
single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) from 401 young-of-the-year (YOY)
POP collected during surveys conducted in 2014 (19 stations) and 2015 (4
stations) in the eastern Gulf of Alaska. Population clustering analysis
showed that the POP samples represented four distinct ancestral
populations mixed throughout the sampling area. Based on prior work on
larval dispersal of POP, these larvae are most likely from distinct
parturition locations that are mixing during their pelagic dispersal
life stage. Latent factor mixed models revealed that POP larvae face
significant selection during their first year at sea, which were
specific to the year of their birth. Thus each adult cohort’s genetic
composition is heavily influenced by the environmental conditions
experienced during their first year at sea. Long-lived species relying
on broadcast spawning strategies may therefore be uniquely resilient to
environmental variability by maintaining a portfolio of cohort-specific
adaptive genotypes, and age truncation due to overfishing of older
cohorts may have detrimental effect on the population viability.