2005
DOI: 10.1111/j.0022-1112.2005.00840.x
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Atlantic salmon colonization of the Russian Arctic coast: pioneers from North America

Abstract: Previous studies of the ESTD* isozyme locus in the Atlantic salmon show the *80 allele to be absent across the species' European range, with the exception of northern Russia, whereas the allele is nearly fixed in North American populations. The allele was found in samples from 15 out of 18 rivers on the Kola Peninsula and White sea coast and had frequencies that ranged from 0Á017 to 0Á363. Typing of fish in nine of these rivers for mtDNA variation in the ND1 gene region found variation characteristic of North … Show more

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Cited by 41 publications
(33 citation statements)
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“…The clear separation of the populations into northeastern Atlantic Ocean and western Barents Sea versus White and eastern Barents Sea populations implies that these regions were colonized from different refugia. Western immigration into the western Barents Sea has been suggested in earlier studies (e.g., Asplund et al 2004;Makhrov et al 2005;Tonteri et al 2005) and is supported by the above. This is further corroborated by allele frequencies at locus Ssa197 in which large alleles (293-329 bp) were found among 9 of the 11 populations forming the Atlantic Ocean and western Barents Sea group but not among populations farther to the east (supplementary Appendix S2).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 72%
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“…The clear separation of the populations into northeastern Atlantic Ocean and western Barents Sea versus White and eastern Barents Sea populations implies that these regions were colonized from different refugia. Western immigration into the western Barents Sea has been suggested in earlier studies (e.g., Asplund et al 2004;Makhrov et al 2005;Tonteri et al 2005) and is supported by the above. This is further corroborated by allele frequencies at locus Ssa197 in which large alleles (293-329 bp) were found among 9 of the 11 populations forming the Atlantic Ocean and western Barents Sea group but not among populations farther to the east (supplementary Appendix S2).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 72%
“…Hence, Atlantic salmon stocks of northwest Russia form an important source of biodiversity for the entire European region and are of immense economic and social importance for the local people in the form of fishing tourism. Currently, however, knowledge of the population genetic structure of Atlantic salmon populations from these regions is based primarily on a mtDNA study (Asplund et al 2004) as well as several studies using nuclear markers, which included only a handful of populations from this region (e.g., Kazakov and Titov 1991;Makhrov et al 2005;Tonteri et al 2005). It would therefore be important to conduct a more detailed study of population genetic structure based on nuclear markers to provide information that could be used in designing management plans and to serve as a baseline to assign individuals caught in offshore fisheries to their populations of origin.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The unusual genetic structure in the Baltic Sea may have resulted from population isolation during the complex marine transgression history resulting from the interplay of sea level changes and the isostatic rebound in the early Quaternary (Lepiksaar, 2001, p. 40). However, it has also been used to infer recolonization from possible glacial refugia in the southern North Sea or beyond the eastern edge of the Fennoscandian ice sheet (e.g., Consuegra et al, 2002;Langefors, 2005;King et al, 2007; but see also Makhrov et al, 2005). A westward recolonization pathway into the Baltic Sea from the White Sea after the LGM was previously perceived as unlikely.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%