Spatial structuring of an evolving life-history strategy under altered environmental conditions

被引:0
作者
Jens C. Hegg
Brian P. Kennedy
Paul M. Chittaro
Richard W. Zabel
机构
[1] University of Idaho,Department of Fish and Wildlife Sciences
[2] University of Idaho,Department of Biological Sciences
[3] NOAA Fisheries Service,Fish Ecology Division, Northwest Fisheries Science Center
[4] University of Idaho,Department of Geological Sciences
来源
Oecologia | 2013年 / 172卷
关键词
Phenotypic plasticity; Local adaptation; Chinook salmon; Juvenile migration; Otolith microchemistry;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Human disturbances to ecosystems have created challenges to populations worldwide, forcing them to respond phenotypically in ways that increase their fitness under current conditions. One approach to examining population responses to disturbance in species with complex life histories is to study species that exhibit spatial patterns in their phenotypic response across populations or demes. In this study, we investigate a threatened population of fall chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) in the Snake River of Idaho, in which a significant fraction of the juvenile population have been shown to exhibit a yearling out-migration strategy which had not previously been thought to exist. It has been suggested that dam-related environmental changes may have altered the selective pressures experienced by out-migrating fall chinook, driving evolution of a later and more selectively advantageous migration strategy. Using isotopic analysis of otoliths from returning adult spawners, we reconstructed the locations of individual fish at three major juvenile life stages to determine if the representation of the yearling life history was geographically structured within the population. We reconstructed juvenile locations for natal, rearing and overwintering life stages in each of the major spawning areas in the basin. Our results indicate that the yearling life-history strategy is predominantly represented within one of the main spawning regions, the Clearwater River, rather than being distributed throughout the basin. Previous studies have shown the Clearwater River to have cooler temperatures, later hatch dates, and later outmigration of juveniles, indicating a link between environment and expression of the yearling life history. Our data suggest that this new yearling life history may be disproportionally represented in returning adult spawners, indicating selection for this life history within the population.
引用
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页码:1017 / 1029
页数:12
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