Understanding the adaptive consequences of hatchery-wild interactions in Alaska salmon

被引:0
|
作者
W. Stewart Grant
机构
[1] Commercial Fisheries Division,
[2] Alaska Department of Fish and Game,undefined
来源
Environmental Biology of Fishes | 2012年 / 94卷
关键词
Adaptive potential; Alaska; Climate variability; Domestication; Genetic diversity; Hatchery-wild interactions; Mating behavior; Pacific salmon; Straying;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
About 31% of salmon harvested in Alaska comes from the hatchery production of hundreds of millions of pink and chum salmon and smaller numbers of sockeye, Chinook, and coho salmon. The numbers of hatchery-reared juveniles released in some areas are greater than the numbers of juveniles from wild populations. However, virtually nothing is known about the effects of hatchery fish on wild populations in Alaska. Possible effects of these interactions can be inferred from studies of salmonids in other areas, from studies of other animals, and from theory. Numerous studies show a complex relationship between the genetic architecture of a population and its environment. Adaptive responses to nature and anthropogenic selection can be influenced by variation at a single gene, or more often, by the additive effects of several genes. Studies of salmonids in other areas show that hatchery practices can lead to the loss of genetic diversity, to shifts in adult run timing and earlier maturity, to increases in parasite load, to increases in straying, to altered levels of boldness and dominance, to shifts in juvenile out-migration timing, and to changes in growth. Controlled experiments across generations show, and theory predicts, that the loss of adaptive fitness in hatchery salmon, relative to fitness in wild salmon, can occur on a remarkably short time scale. All of these changes can influence survival and impose selective regimes that influence genetically based adaptive traits. The preservation of adaptive potential in wild populations is an important buffer against diseases and climate variability and, hence, should be considered in planning hatchery production levels and release locations. The protection of wild populations is the foundation for achieving sustained harvests of salmon in Alaska.
引用
收藏
页码:325 / 342
页数:17
相关论文
共 49 条
  • [41] Consequences of high temperatures and premature mortality on the transcriptome and blood physiology of wild adult sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka)
    Jeffries, Ken M.
    Hinch, Scott G.
    Sierocinski, Thomas
    Clark, Timothy D.
    Eliason, Erika J.
    Donaldson, Michael R.
    Li, Shaorong
    Pavlidis, Paul
    Miller, Kristi M.
    ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2012, 2 (07): : 1747 - 1764
  • [42] Anthropogenic habitat alteration leads to rapid loss of adaptive variation and restoration potential in wild salmon populations
    Thompson, Tasha Q.
    Bellinger, M. Renee
    O'Rourke, Sean M.
    Prince, Daniel J.
    Stevenson, Alexander E.
    Rodrigues, Antonia T.
    Sloat, Matthew R.
    Speller, Camilla F.
    Yang, Dongya Y.
    Butler, Virginia L.
    Banks, Michael A.
    Miller, Michael R.
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2019, 116 (01) : 177 - 186
  • [43] Anisakis simplex (s.s.) larvae in wild Alaska salmon: no indication of post-mortem migration from viscera into flesh
    Karl, Horst
    Baumann, Florian
    Ostermeyer, Ute
    Kuhn, Thomas
    Klimpel, Sven
    DISEASES OF AQUATIC ORGANISMS, 2011, 94 (03) : 201 - 209
  • [44] Allele frequency stability in large, wild exploited populations over multiple generations: insights from Alaska sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka)
    Gomez-Uchida, Daniel
    Seeb, James E.
    Habicht, Christopher
    Seeb, Lisa W.
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FISHERIES AND AQUATIC SCIENCES, 2012, 69 (05) : 916 - 929
  • [45] Is blood cortisol or vateritic otolith composition associated with natal dispersal or reproductive performance on the spawning grounds of straying and homing hatchery-produced chum salmon (Oncorhynchus keta) in Southeast Alaska?
    McConnell, Casey J.
    Atkinson, Shannon
    Oxman, Dion
    Westley, Peter A. H.
    BIOLOGY OPEN, 2019, 8 (06):
  • [46] A comparison of infectious agents between hatchery-enhanced and wild out-migrating juvenile chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) from Cowichan River, British Columbia
    Thakur, Krishna K.
    Vanderstichel, Raphael
    Li, Shaorong
    Laurin, Emilie
    Tucker, Strahan
    Neville, Chrys
    Tabata, Amy
    Miller, Kristina M.
    FACETS, 2018, 3 : 695 - 721
  • [47] Does density influence relative growth performance of farm, wild and F1 hybrid Atlantic salmon in semi-natural and hatchery common garden conditions?
    Harvey, Alison C.
    Juleff, Gareth
    Carvalho, Gary R.
    Taylor, Martin I.
    Solberg, Monica F.
    Creer, Simon
    Dyrhovden, Lise
    Matre, Ivar-Helge
    Glover, Kevin A.
    ROYAL SOCIETY OPEN SCIENCE, 2016, 3 (07):
  • [48] Market interactions between aquaculture and common-property fisheries: Recent evidence from the Bristol Bay sockeye salmon fishery in Alaska
    Valderrama, Diego
    Anderson, James L.
    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL ECONOMICS AND MANAGEMENT, 2010, 59 (02) : 115 - 128
  • [49] Understanding consequences of adaptive monitoring protocols on data consistency: application to the monitoring of giant clam densities impacted by massive mortalities in Tuamotu atolls, French Polynesia
    Georget, Stephane
    Van Wynsberge, Simon
    Andrefouet, Serge
    ICES JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE, 2019, 76 (04) : 1062 - 1071