The salmonid-specific fourth vertebrate whole-genome duplication (Ss4R) occurred ~80 million years ago in the ancestor of all salmonids and provides a unique opportunity to study the evolutionary history of the duplicated genome. Study of the genome of Brachymystax lenok tsinlingensis might be particularly insightful given that this is the only Brachymystax species with a published salmonid genome. Here, we present a high-quality chromosome-level genome assembly for B. l. tsinlingensis and found that the salmonids have a unique GC content and codon usage, have undergone a whole-genome duplication event and a burst of transposon-mediated repeat expansion, have a slower evolutionary rate, and possess specific expanded gene families and unique positively selected genes. Generally, the B. l. tsinlingensis genome could provide a valuable reference for the study of other salmonids as well as aid the conservation of this endangered species.