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Dangosydd eitem ddigidol (DOI)

  • William Bernard Perry
  • Joshka Kaufmann
    University College Cork
  • Monica Favneboe Solberg
    Institute of Marine Research, Nordnes, Bergen, Norway
  • Christopher Brodie
    University of Salford
  • Angela Maria Coral Medina
    University College Cork
  • Kirthana Pillay
  • Anna Egerton
  • Alison Harvey
    Institute of Marine Research, Nordnes, Bergen, Norway
  • Karl P. Phillips
    University College Cork
  • Jamie Coughlan
    University College Cork
  • Fintan Egan
    University College Cork
  • Ronan Grealis
    University College Cork
  • Steve Hutton
    University College Cork
  • Floriane Leseur
    University College Cork
  • Sarah Ryan
    University College Cork
  • Russell Poole
    Marine Institute, Furnace, Newport
  • Ger Rogan
    Marine Institute, Furnace, Newport
  • Elizabeth Ryder
    University College Cork
  • Patrick Schaal
    Marine Institute, Furnace, Newport
  • Catherine Waters
    Marine Institute, Furnace, Newport
  • Robert Wynne
    University College Cork
  • Martin Taylor
    University of East Anglia
  • Paulo Prodohl
    Queen's University, Belfast
  • Simon Creer
  • Martin Llewellyn
    Institute of Health and Wellbeing, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, Scotland
  • Philip McGinnity
    University College Cork
  • Gary Carvalho
  • Kevin Alan Glover
    University of Bergen
Domestication leads to changes in traits that are under directional selection in breeding programmes, though unintentional changes in nonproduction traits can also arise. In offspring of escaping fish and any hybrid progeny, such unintentionally altered traits may reduce fitness in the wild. Atlantic salmon breeding programmes were established in the early 1970s, resulting in genetic changes in multiple traits. However, the impact of domestication on eye size has not been studied. We measured body size corrected eye size in 4000 salmon from six common garden experiments conducted under artificial and natural conditions, in freshwater and saltwater environments, in two countries. Within these common gardens, offspring of domesticated and wild parents were crossed to produce 11 strains, with varying genetic backgrounds (wild, domesticated, F1 hybrids, F2 hybrids and backcrosses). Size-adjusted eye size was influenced by both genetic and environmental factors. Domesticated fish reared under artificial conditions had smaller adjusted eye size when compared to wild fish reared under identical conditions, in both the freshwater and marine environments, and in both Irish and Norwegian experiments. However, in parr that had been introduced into a river environment shortly after hatching and sampled at the end of their first summer, differences in adjusted eye size observed among genetic groups were of a reduced magnitude and were nonsignificant in 2-year-old sea migrating smolts sampled in the river immediately prior to sea entry. Collectively, our findings could suggest that where natural selection is present, individuals with reduced eye size are maladapted and consequently have reduced fitness, building on our understanding of the mechanisms that underlie a well-documented reduction in the fitness of the progeny of domesticated salmon, including hybrid progeny, in the wild.

Allweddeiriau

Iaith wreiddiolSaesneg
Tudalennau (o-i)2319-2332
Nifer y tudalennau14
CyfnodolynEvolutionary Applications
Cyfrol14
Rhif y cyfnodolyn9
Dyddiad ar-lein cynnar21 Medi 2021
Dynodwyr Gwrthrych Digidol (DOIs)
StatwsCyhoeddwyd - 28 Medi 2021

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