Genetic population structures of fishing resources (abalone, sea cucumber, and sea urchin) off the coast of southern Iwate Prefecture, Japan
Period and Interval2015/04/01 - 2016/03/31
Sampling: several times in a year, analysis: any time
Research Area
Touni Bay and Okirai Bay, Iwate Prefecture
CategoryOthers(Collection in the field and analysis in the laboratory)
OverviewPacific abalone Haliotis discus hannai, Japanese sea cucumber Apostichopus japonicus, and Japanese sea urchin Strongylocentrotus nudus are economically important marine products in Sanriku Coast, Iwate, Japan. Since fishing of the above species is dependent on their natural resources, it is important to examine the influence of the tsunami that hit the Pacific Coast after the Tohoku Earthquake in 2011, on natural marine resources. We assume that the tsunami caused a reduction in the number of individuals in the parental population, which in turn caused a reduction in the genetic diversity. In this study, to monitor the reduction in genetic diversity, which could cause population decline, we will compare the genetic population structures of the above three species before and after tsunami by using microsatellite (ms) DNA markers. This year, we will collect new generation samples to analyze the increase in ms loci from the previous msDNA analysis of the populations. Furthermore, to examine changes in the genetic diversity, we will also analyze the mitochondrial (mt) DNA for these populations.