Data from: Quantifying heritable variation in fitness-related traits of wild, farmed and hybrid Atlantic salmon families in a wild river environment
Farmed fish are typically genetically different from wild conspecifics. Escapees from fish farms may contribute one-way gene flow from farm to wild gene pools, which can depress population productivity, dilute local adaptations and disrupt coadapted gene complexes. Here, we reanalyse data from two e...
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Zusammenfassung: | Farmed fish are typically genetically different from wild conspecifics.
Escapees from fish farms may contribute one-way gene flow from farm to
wild gene pools, which can depress population productivity, dilute local
adaptations and disrupt coadapted gene complexes. Here, we reanalyse data
from two experiments (McGinnity et al., 1997, 2003) where performance of
Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) progeny originating from experimental
crosses between farm and wild parents (in three different cohorts) were
measured in a natural stream under common garden conditions. Previous
published analyses focussed on group-level differences but did not account
for pedigree structure, as we do here using modern mixed-effect models.
Offspring with one or two farm parents exhibited poorer survival in their
first and second year of life compared with those with two wild parents
and these group-level inferences were robust to excluding outlier
families. Variation in performance among farm, hybrid and wild families
was generally similar in magnitude. Farm offspring were generally larger
at all life stages examined than wild offspring, but the differences were
moderate (5–20%) and similar in magnitude in the wild versus hatchery
environments. Quantitative genetic analyses conducted using a Bayesian
framework revealed moderate heritability in juvenile fork length and mass
and positive genetic correlations (>0.85) between these
morphological traits. Our study confirms (using more rigorous statistical
techniques) previous studies showing that offspring of wild fish
invariably have higher fitness and contributes fresh insights into
family-level variation in performance of farm, wild and hybrid Atlantic
salmon families in the wild. It also adds to a small, but growing, number
of studies that estimate key evolutionary parameters in wild salmonid
populations. Such information is vital in modelling the impacts of
introgression by escaped farm salmon. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.bk583 |