Amongst farmed crustaceans, the giant freshwater prawn Macrobrachium
rosenbergii was until recently one of the major species with high
commercial value. Lately, it has lost popularity due to diseases and
differential growth of males on account of social hierarchy. The species
can reacquire its former preferred status if it is genetically improved
for growth and disease resistance. Selective breeding is greatly
facilitated by marker-assisted selection (MAS). Single nucleotide
polymorphisms (SNPs) offer the finest resolution possible for a marker
map (a single nucleotide change), are co-dominant, bi-allelic and
generally abundant in populations with a low mutation rate. DNA
sequencing through NGS platforms is regarded as the most cost-effective
approach. In this study, SNP mining was carried out in the transcribed
sequences of M. rosenbergii available in GenBank, NCBI. Wild specimens
were collected from different water bodies. Primers were designed to
amplify coding (CDS) and sequenced the amplicons on GS-FLX 454 and Ion
torrent platforms. 173 SNPs were detected across populations. This
approach for mining SNPs in reported sequences has been used by us for
the first time.