Selection and genetic drift in captive versus wild populations: an assessment of neutral and adaptive (MHC-linked) genetic variation in wild and hatchery brown trout (Salmo trutta) populations

Captive bred individuals are often released into natural environments to supplement resident populations. Captive bred salmonid fishes often exhibit lower survival rates than their wild brethren and stocking measures may have a negative influence on the overall fitness of natural populations. Stocke...

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Veröffentlicht in:Conservation genetics 2017-10, Vol.18 (5), p.1011-1022
Hauptverfasser: Schenekar, Tamara, Weiss, Steven
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Captive bred individuals are often released into natural environments to supplement resident populations. Captive bred salmonid fishes often exhibit lower survival rates than their wild brethren and stocking measures may have a negative influence on the overall fitness of natural populations. Stocked fish often stem from a different evolutionary lineage than the resident population and thus may be maladapted for life in the wild, but this phenomenon has also been linked to genetic changes that occur in captivity. In addition to overall loss of genetic diversity via captive breeding, adaptation to captivity has become a major concern. Altered selection pressure in captivity may favour alleles at adaptive loci like the Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC) that are maladaptive in natural environments. We investigated neutral and MHC-linked genetic variation in three autochthonous and three hatchery populations of Austrian brown trout ( Salmo trutta ). We confirm a positive selection pressure acting on the MHC II β locus, whereby the signal for positive selection was stronger in hatchery versus wild populations. Additionally, diversity at the MHC II β locus was higher, and more uniform among hatchery samples compared to wild populations, despite equal levels of diversity at neutral loci. We postulate that this stems from a combination of stronger genetic drift and a weakening of positive selection at this locus in wild populations that already have well adapted alleles for their specific environments.
ISSN:1566-0621
1572-9737
DOI:10.1007/s10592-017-0949-3