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BI3060H08

BI3060H08. NEKTON. BI3060H08. Nekton: contrary to plankton, nektonic organisms are not passively carried by ocean currents. They may be characterized as "swimmers" because they, at least to some degree, can determine their movements and position in the water.

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BI3060H08

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  1. BI3060H08 NEKTON

  2. BI3060H08 • Nekton: • contrary to plankton, nektonic organisms are not passively carried by ocean currents. They may be characterized as "swimmers" because they, at least to some degree, can determine their movements and position in the water. • Marine nektonic organisms include several animal groups: • molluscs (snails, cephalopodes) • crustaceans (shrimps, swimming crabs) • fishes (cod, herring, salmon) • reptiles (water snakes, turtles) • mammals (seals, dolphins, whales, sea utters) • sea birds (cormorants, puffins)

  3. BI3060H08 The present course will focus on one particular group of nekton, namely fishes. However, some field methods and many lab methods are similar or identical in studies of other groups. We shall focus on how to explore the individual and general biology of fishes, their distribution in the oceans (currents, migrations), and their genetic properties and population structures (in other words the subdivision of fish species into separate reproductive units). Note that a reproductive unit, or a population, may not mean the same as a stock, which is a much more loosely defined group. Fisheries management has traditionally been about stocks. Ideally it should be focusing on populations, i.e. the real reproduction units. Those units are identified and characterized by both biological and genetic methodology. In this course we will demonstrate measurements, instruments, laboratory methods and statistical tools that can help us gain information of and insight into these topics with the aim to improve our management of marine resources.

  4. BI3060H08 Fish(eries) biology and population genetics Fish stocks; methods for identification, delimitation, and characterization. • Stock identification • Catch statistics (movements of fleet, landings) • Tagging-recapture studies (Lea-tag, Floy-tag, PIT tags, eye-tags) • Biological characterization (growth, age at first maturity etc) • Genetic characterization (gene markers, allele frequencies) • Practical sampling • Length, weight, age, sex, gonadic stage, maturity age • Fish scales and/or otoliths for ageing, tissue biopsy and autopsy • Blood- og tissue samples for genetic and clinical chemistry analyses • Securing data and measurements in e.g. Excel spreadsheets • Analyses • Age determination (scales, otoliths) • Electrophoretic analyses (blood, isozymes, DNA markers) • Relative yearclass strength from age composition in samples • The term MLY (maximum long term yield) or MSY (...sustainable...)

  5. BI3060H08 Fish(eries) biology and population genetics A research vessel equipped for trawling is a basic prerequisite. This is the research vessel R/V "Gunnerus" of NTNU, Norway.

  6. BI3060H08 Fish(eries) biology and population genetics Fish stocks and migrations North-East Arctic cod (NEAC; skrei) Nursery areas, migration routes, and spawning areas for the NEAC cod stock.

  7. BI3060H08 Fish(eries) biology and population genetics Fish stocks and migrations Herring in the Trondheimsfjord

  8. BI3060H08 Fish(eries) biology and population genetics Fish stocks and migrations Atlantic salmon The Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) is found on both sides of the north Atlantic. The main salmon stocks today are Norwegian (ca 500 salmon waterways). After some years in fresh water the salmon parr smoltifies, and miigrates to nutrition-rich oceanic waters..It reaches maturity after 1-3 years there, and returns to its birth river to spawn. Norwegian river stocks utilises the Norwegian Sea for its marine growth stage, but salmon from western European (Ireland, Spain) countries migrates more frequently to Greenlandic waters for the ongrowth period.

  9. BI3060H08 Fish(eries) biology and population genetics Fish stocks and migrations Salmonids are anadromous, i.e. the migrates to fresh water for reproduction. Salmon are capable of traversing strong rapids and high waterfalls on its route to the spawning places.

  10. BI3060H08 Fish(eries) biology and population genetics NEKTON AND FISHERIES OCEANOGRAPHY The large oceanic current systems dictate both climate and pelagic transport routes in the North Atlantic.

  11. BI3060H08 Fish(eries) biology and population genetics Bottom topography of the north Atlantic NEKTON AND FISHERIES OCEANOGRAPHY

  12. BI3060H08 Fish(eries) biology and population genetics The termination of the last glaciation marks the start of the expansion period which resulted in the current distribution of fish species in the north Atlantic, including Scandinavia.

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  14. Fish(eries) biology and population genetics BI3060H08 Methods in fish(eries) biology

  15. BI3060H08 Fish(eries) biology and population genetics Methods in fish(eries) biology The morphology of fishes is basis for species identifications, and clue to their habitats and way of life. The "bird" and three dorsal fins are, e.g. characteristic of gadoids. Internal anatomies and organs are more or less variations on the same theme for vertebrates.

  16. Fish(eries) biology and population genetics BI3060H08 Migrations: Tagging-recapture Methods in fish(eries) biology Four commonly used fish tags. From top: PIT tag (passive integrated transponder tag), Floy anchor tag, Lea hydrostatic tag, and another Floy tag. The Floy tags are pushed by a tagging pistol into the fish muscle, whereas the Lea and PIT tags are put in place with special-made needles. Inside the Lea tag is a letter in English, Russian and Norwegian, in which the Finder is asked to return the tag with data on size, sex, and date, gir and depth of catch. Also the otolith, which is used for age determination, is asked for.

  17. Fish(eries) biology and population genetics BI3060H08 Fish stocks; methods for identification, delimination, and characterization. Year-class strength estimated from age composition in samples • Approach: • Sampling with non-selective gir (fine-mesh trawl) • Determine individual age of specimens (otoliths) • Tabulate number in different age groups (year-classes) • Linear regression to find mean annual mortality • Put mortality into formula for number at time=t • Express each year-class as percent of the best year-class • Draw the curve for relative year-class strength on a time scale

  18. Fish(eries) biology and population genetics BI3060H08 Year-class... Age determination by means of annual zones in the otoliths. Photos are from cod From the Trondheims- Fjord (Photo Ekli). Determination of the deposition pattern duriing the first year of life is a critical step in ageing. It can be difficult to interpret, and warrants a time series of one year. The age composition in a sample can be used to calculate relative year-class strength for the stock under study.

  19. Fish(eries) biology and population genetics BI3060H08 Year-class... Relative year-class strength; example Cf method of calculations on the next slides

  20. Fish(eries) biology and population genetics BI3060H08 Year-class... Calculating annual mortality: Use formula Nt=N0e-zt, in ln-format: ln(Nt) = ln(N0)- zt [ corresponds to Y=a + bX in linear regression ] Put in paired values for t and ln(Nt) in some statistical programme Perform an linear regresion. The slope in the regression will be the z in the formula at top of page Annual survival S will then be e-z, and annual mortality (x) is (1-S) Calculation of relative year-class strength: Use the formula N0 = Nt / (1-x)t , where x is the mean annual mortality (calculated as shown above). Get the intrinsic strength relations for the year-classes. Set the largest year-class to 100%, and let the other be proportional to that value. Plot the sizes on a time scale (years).

  21. Fish(eries) biology and population genetics BI3060H08 Year-class... EXAMPLE Assume a sample caught in the year 1990 with the following age distribution obrained by otoilitg readings: bestemt ved otolittlesning: 2 years: 710 individuals (year-class 1988) 3 years: 240 individuals (year-class 1987) 4 years: 50 individuals (year-class 1986) Nt=N0e-zt ln(Nt) = ln(N0) – zt A linear regression of ln(Nt) on t gives a slope (=regression coefficient) z = - 1.3266. Converting back gives z = (2.718^(-1.3266))=0.2654. Annual survival (S) is thus: S = 0.2654, and annual mortality x = (1-S) = 0.7346. By the formula N0 = Nt / (1-x)t the relative year-class strengths (relative in parenthesis): 2 years (1988) : 1315.5 (100%) 3 years (1987) : 605.4 (46 %) 4 years (1986) : 171.7 (13%)

  22. Fish(eries) biology and population genetics BI3060H08 MLY (maximum long term yield)

  23. Fish(eries) biology and population genetics BI3060H08 Population genetics methods

  24. Fish(eries) biology and population genetics BI3060H08 Population genetic methods has gained increased interest for the detection and delimination of reproductive units of marine stocks in the last 4-5 decades, particularly for species which do not lend theirselves easily to tagging-recapture studies. In order to apply genetic tools we need to know the individual genotype for specific heritable traits. Such information is readily obtained by various electro-phoretic methods (cf figures to the right, and later slides). In this course we use the individual genetic signature for species identification of anonymous tissue samples, as well as for establishing genetic characteristics for populations.

  25. BI3060H08 Fish(eries) biology and population genetics Population genetic methods When having collected samples and performed electrophoretic determination of individual genotype for some character (e.g. LDH or PGM as in this course), there are two basic types of statistical tests to be performed: First, we want to test whether each of our samples are drawn from unit populations, i.e. from "pure" populations in so-called Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium (cf HW-slide). This we do with the so-called Chi-squared Goodness-of-fit test (cf HW-slide). Secondly, we want to test whether there are genetic differences between our samples, i.e. whether they may have been drawn from different populations with different genetic characteristics. This is done with another chi-square test, the so-called Chi-squared RxC contingency table test, also called the chi-squared test of homogeneity (cf RxC slide).

  26. Fish(eries) biology and population genetics BI3060H08 Methods for characterising stocks by their frequencies of various ndividual enotypes

  27. Fish(eries) biology and population genetics BI3060H08

  28. Fish(eries) biology and population genetics BI3060H08 Genetic nomenclature (jargon): Synonyms: Gene frequency = allele frequency = allelic proportion The frequency of an allele (e.g. A) is often abbreviated qA, qB, qC, etc, or alternatively, pA, qB, rC etc. In general, the phenotypes (e.g. active isozymes, proteins) are written in normal font (e.g. AA phenotype) while genotype is written in Italic (AA genotype). However, there is no general consistency between textbooks in how this is handled.

  29. Fish(eries) biology and population genetics BI3060H08 • Populations are the real evolutionary units. • The raw material of evolution are mutations, which can accumulate with time • in populations and species, and result in multiple alleles at many loci. • Evolution can thus be defined as "any change in allele frequencies". • The frequencies of different alleles at a locus can be changed by the • 4 evolutionary forces, which are: • Mutations • Random genetic drift • Gene flow (immigration) • Selection • If these forces are nullified, we have what is called a "Hardy-Weinberg population"; a • panmictic (random mating), statistically ideal population where the allele frequencies, • and thereby the genotype frequencies, are constant and do not change over generations • (a socalled H-W equilibrium). The population genetic approach is to assume a H-W • equilibrium situation, and then study how the 4 evolutionary forces each, and in • combinations, influence the allele- and genotypic frequencies within and between • populations.

  30. Fish(eries) biology and population genetics BI3060H08 • Underlying assumption for the H-W law about genotypic proportions: • Panmixi (random mating) • No mutations • No random genetic drift (i.e. infinitely large population) • No gene flow between populations (i.e. no immigration) • No selection (same fitness of all genotypes)

  31. Fish(eries) biology and population genetics BI3060H08 The Hardy-Weinbergs law: "In a panmictic, statistically ideal population, the genotypic proportions are determined by the allele frequencies (p and q in the formula below) at the locus, according to the binomial formula (multinomial if more than two alleles)": (p+q)2 = p2 + 2pq + q2 (if only two alleles) The allele frequencies will be constant over generations and restore the same genotypic proportions in each new generation. Allele- and genotype frequencies can thus serve as population characteristics.

  32. Fish(eries) biology and population genetics BI3060H08 Methods for the study of frequencies of single genes

  33. Fish(eries) biology and population genetics BI3060H08 Chi-squared test for goodness-of-fit to H-W proportions Assume that we have studied a locus with two alleles by electrophoresis. We have named the alleles F and S according to their electrophoretic migration distance (Fast and Slow). There are three possible genotypes (FF, SF og SS). In a sample of N=50 individuals from a natural population we observed 10 with genotype FF, 28 with genotype SF, and 12 with genotype SS. We want to test if this genotype distribution is reasonably close to the H-W expected values calculated from the observed allele frequencies in the sample. For this we use a so-called chi-square Goodness-of-fit test (table below). We use a table of critical values of the chi-square distribution in some text book to check the significance level of the chi-square value calculated. The degrees of freedom (df) is caclulated as the number of genotypes minus the number of alleles (i.e. df = 3-2 =1).

  34. Fish(eries) biology and population genetics BI3060H08 Chi-squared RxC test of genetic homogeneity of different samples (populations) To test for differences in allelic or genotypic proportions between samples we use a RxC (rows by columns) chi-square contingency test. We usually test for both genotypic and allelic heterogeneity between samples. The latter is statistically the most powerfulI one. Consider two samples of N=100 each, and one polymorphic locus with two alleles (A og B): Genotypes_______ Samples AA AB BB N --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Sample 1 36(26) 48(48) 16(26) 100 Sample 2 16(26) 48(48) 36(26) 100 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total 52 96 52 200 ===================================================== Our "Null hypothesis" for test is that the samples are taken from one and the same population. If so, our best estimate of the true genotype and allele distribution in the materials is found in the "Total". We therefore use the distribution in the "Total" to estimate what "should have been" in the two single samples (we "forget" about the H-W distributions in this test).The expected number of AA genotypes in Sample 1 is then, e.g., ((52/200)*100)=26. As in all chi-square tests we find the test observator in this way: Take the square of the difference between observed and expected value, and divide it by the expected value. Do this for all genotypes in both samples, and sum the results. The number of degrees of fredom in a contingency table (RxC) is calculated differently from the "H-W Goodness-of-fit". Degrees of fredom is here calculated as (R-1)(C-1). For the genotypic values in the table above, we find a chi-square value of 15.38, and 2 degrees of freedom. In a textbook table of the chi-square distribution we find that this corresponds to a significance level of P < 0.001. (actually the exact P-value is 0.00046). For testing for homogeneity of allelic proportions in the same two samples, the RxC table will look like this: Allele _ Sample A B N ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Sample 1 120(100) 80(100) 200 Sample 2 80(100) 120(100) 200 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total 200 200 400 ===================================================== The chi-square for this table is 16.00. However, here we have only one degree of freedom. Therefore the P-value for this outcome (P=0.00006) is lower than in the genotype test. In both tests, the null hypothesis can be safely rejected. Our samples are not from the same population.

  35. BI3060H08 Fish(eries) biology and population genetics Results from electrophoretic analyses H08 Genetic species identifications: Muscle tissue from 13 individual fish of various species were analysed for the tissue enzyme LDH (Lactate dehydrogenase; E.C. No. 1.1.1.27) by IFPAG, according to a protocol handed out as a leaflet in the lab. The individual banding patterns for the muscle LDH locus were diagnostic to species for the 13 individuals (cf photo next slide). Minor "muscle" LDH activity was also observed in blood haemolysates (cf photo next slide). In the cod, a known polymorphism at the anodic LDH "heart locus" was manifested as homo- and heterozygote patterns typical for a tetrameric protein (cf photo next slide). The other species were monomorphic. The cod inter-locus hybrid bands were consistent with hybrid tetrameric molecules between the monomorphic muscle locus and the polymorphic heart locus (cf photo next slide).

  36. BI3060H08 Fish(eries) biology and population genetics Genetic species identifications Below: Photo of IFPAG gel stained for LDH in 13 individual fish on the BI3060 course H08 + IFPAG gel T=5%, C=3%, Servalyt 4-9 T Upper frame shows non- diagnostic heart locus bands; cod heart locus polymorphism evident. Bands in-between the frames are inter-locus hybrid molecules of the LDH tetramer. Lower frame shows muscle locus bands; these bands are diagnostic to species in Norwegian gadoids. - From left to right: 5 cod, 2 pollack, 2 cod, 2 pollack, 1 saithe, and 1 poor cod.

  37. BI3060H08 Fish(eries) biology and population genetics Genetic characterization of populations Starch gel electrophoresis of the tissue enzymes LDH and and PGM in a sample of cod from the Trondheimsfjord in March/April 2008. Results from individual genotype counts. For Chi-squared HW-goodness-of-fit tests of these two genotype distributions, refer to procedure on slide # 33.

  38. BI3060H08 Fish(eries) biology and population genetics Genetic characterization of populations LDH-3* genotypic distributions in two samples of cod from the inner part of the Trondheimsfjord, sampled with 25 years interval (1983 and 2008). 1)Materials from LTS cruice March/April 2008, analyzed at BI3060 course autumn 2008 2)Published data from Mork & Sundnes 1985 ("O-group cod in captivity...") To check (with a chi-squared RxC test) whether the genotypic proportions in the two samples from the Trondheimsfjord are homogeneous, refer to statistical procedure on slide # 34.

  39. BI3060H08 SEPARATION SLIDE

  40. BI3060H08 Fish(eries) biology and population genetics INSTRUMENTS AND KITS USED ON THE COURSE

  41. Fish(eries) biology and population genetics BI3060H08 Starch gel electrophoresis setup Circulating cooler Power supply Electrophoresis cell

  42. BI3060H08 Fish(eries) biology and population genetics Age determination by otoliths is done in a stereo-microscope with low magnification (10-16 X ocular, no objective).

  43. Fish(eries) biology and population genetics BI3060H08 DIALUX microscope used for study of blood smears.

  44. BI3060H08 Fish(eries) biology and population genetics Instrument for clinical-chemical analyses (Reflotron "dry chemistry")

  45. BI3060H08 Fish(eries) biology and population genetics Instrument for Isoelectric focusing in polyacrylamide gel (IFPAG)

  46. Fish(eries) biology and population genetics BI3060H08 Haematocrit centrifuge

  47. BI3060H08 Fish(eries) biology and population genetics PIT tags (1x10 mm) Scanner device for PIT tags (passive integrated transponder)

  48. BI3060H08 Fish(eries) biology and population genetics Tagging needle and Lea hydrostatic tag

  49. BI3060H08 Fish(eries) biology and population genetics Tagging gun and Floy anchour tags

  50. BI3060H08 Fish(eries) biology and population genetics Biopsy needle

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