Data from: Genetic assessment of a summer chum salmon metapopulation in recovery
Programs to rebuild imperiled wild fish populations often include hatchery-born fish derived from wild populations to supplement natural spawner abundance. These programs require monitoring to determine their demographic, biological, and genetic effects. In 1990s in Washington State, the Summer Chum...
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Zusammenfassung: | Programs to rebuild imperiled wild fish populations often include
hatchery-born fish derived from wild populations to supplement natural
spawner abundance. These programs require monitoring to determine their
demographic, biological, and genetic effects. In 1990s in Washington
State, the Summer Chum Salmon Conservation Initiative developed a recovery
program for the threatened Hood Canal summer chum salmon Evolutionarily
Significant Unit (ESU) (the metapopulation) that used in-river spawners
(wild fish) for each respective supplementation broodstock in six
tributaries. Returning spawners (wild-born and hatchery-born) composed
subsequent broodstocks, and tributary-specific supplementation was limited
to three generations. We assessed impacts of the programs on neutral
genetic diversity in this metapopulation using 16 microsatellite loci and
a thirty-year dataset spanning before and after supplementation, roughly
eight generations. Following supplementation, differentiation among
subpopulations decreased (but not significantly) and isolation by distance
patterns remained unchanged. There was no decline in genetic diversity in
wild-born fish, but hatchery-born fish sampled in the same spawning areas
had significantly lower genetic diversity and unequal family
representation. Despite potential for negative effects from
supplementation programs, few were detected in wild-born fish. We
hypothesize that chum salmon natural history makes them less vulnerable to
negative impacts from hatchery supplementation. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.k2q95 |