Volume 49

The Use of DNA Markers in Stock Discrimination of Commercially Important Fish Species and Their Application to Management of the Four-wing Flyingfish, Hirundichthys assinis, in the Caribbean


Authors
Gomes, C.; Oxenford, H.A.; Dales, R.B.G.
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Other Information


Date: November, 1996


Pages: 299-315


Event: Proceedings of the Forty-Nine Annual Gulf and Caribbean Fisheries Institute


City: Christ Church


Country: Barbados

Abstract

The ability to discriminate between genetically independent stocks of commercially important species is essential for the development of sound fisheries management and conservation strategies. Traditional techniques, such as the use of morphological, physiological and behavioural characteristics, which may be strongly affected by environmental factors, have now been largely superceded by molecular biology techniques which use genetic markers (i.e. protein enzyme markers and DNA markers) to examine the genome. This paper reviews the latest developments in the use of DNA markers for fish stock discrimination; reports on their application to testing the hypothesis of a single, shared stock of the four-wing flying&h, Hirundichthys affinis, in the Caribbean; and discusses the management implications

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