Genetics in the ocean's twilight zone: Population structure of the Mueller's pearlside across its distribution range
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The large estimates of mesopelagic fish biomass have fuelled harvesting interests in the relatively untouched ocean's twilight zone. The Mueller's pearlside, one of the most abundant species inhabiting the north Atlantic mesopelagic layer, is a candidate to such fisheries despite its enormous ecological importance and the insufficient knowledge about its population genetic structure. To shed light on the latter, 863 individuals sampled across the North Atlantic and Mediterranean were genotyped using 170 genome-wide SNPs. Analyses revealed habitat-driven differentiation in three units: Mediterranean Sea, oceanic samples, and Norwegian fjords. These groups were not completely isolated to each other as a cline of Mediterranean admixture was detected in the Eastern Atlantic façade up to latitude 47 °N in an otherwise genetically homogeneous oceanic cluster. Temperature seemed to modulate the differentiation patterns, and in the Mediterranean added to the complicated topography of the Greek Seas to shape genetic structure. In the Norwegian coastline, sills did not hamper genetic exchange among fjords ranging 200 km apart, probably due to the position of the species in the water column together with its swimming capacity. This genetic information should be combined with demographic properties to outline the management of this species prior to any eventual fishery attempt.