A quantitative genetic analysis of life-history traits and lifetime reproductive success in reintroduced Chinook salmon

被引:0
作者
Melissa L. Evans
Jeffrey J. Hard
Andrew N. Black
Nicholas M. Sard
Kathleen G. O’Malley
机构
[1] Shoshone-Bannock Tribes,Fish and Wildlife Department
[2] National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration,Conservation Biology Division, Northwest Fisheries Science Center, National Marine Fisheries Service
[3] Hatfield Marine Science Center,Coastal Oregon Marine Experiment Station
[4] Department of Fisheries and Wildlife,Center for Genome Research and Biocomputing
[5] Oregon State University,Fisheries and Wildlife Department
[6] Oregon State University,undefined
[7] Michigan State University,undefined
来源
Conservation Genetics | 2019年 / 20卷
关键词
Chinook salmon; Life-history evolution; Heritability; Natural selection; Parental effects; Animal model;
D O I
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Reintroductions are widely implemented as a means of reestablishing wild populations and genetic parentage methods can be used in concert with these efforts to monitor and evaluate efficacy. In addition to understanding demographic outcomes, reconstructed pedigrees, when combined with phenotypic data, can provide insight into the adaptive potential of reintroduced individuals. Here, we examined the heritability and evolvability of life-history traits and lifetime reproductive success in two threatened Chinook salmon populations undergoing reintroduction to historical habitats above dams in Oregon, USA, using previously-developed multigenerational genetic pedigrees. All of the examined life-history traits: length-at-maturity, age-at-maturity, and arrival timing to the spawning grounds, and lifetime reproductive success exhibited significant narrow-sense heritabilities and evolvabilities. There was also a detectable influence of parental effects (i.e., paternal or maternal effects) on life-history trait variation, suggesting that in addition to genetic effects, nongenetic inheritance mechanisms are influencing life-history diversity in the populations. Additionally, our analyses revealed evidence of natural selection on the date of reintroduction, although the form and intensity of selection differed between the two populations; the forms of selection also point to the potential for phenotype-environment mismatch under some conditions. Overall, our results suggest that these threatened Chinook salmon populations exhibit significant adaptive potential, a factor that should be important to the longer-term success of recovery efforts.
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页码:781 / 799
页数:18
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