4.6 Article

Introgression of domesticated salmon changes life history and phenology of a wild salmon population

Journal

EVOLUTIONARY APPLICATIONS
Volume 15, Issue 5, Pages 853-864

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/eva.13375

Keywords

Atlantic salmon; feralization; genetic introgression

Funding

  1. Norwegian Ministry of Trade, Industry and Fisheries

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The release of domesticated conspecifics into the natural environment can alter the genetic integrity and evolutionary trajectory of wild populations. A study on Atlantic salmon revealed phenotypic and life history changes in response to gene flow from domesticated fish, with most changes likely to be maladaptive. However, highly admixed fish showed a delayed date of return to the river, which may confer a survival advantage in the face of angling.
The release of domesticated conspecifics into the natural environment, whether deliberate or accidental, has the potential to alter the genetic integrity and evolutionary trajectory of wild populations. This widespread challenge is of particular concern for wild Atlantic salmon. By investigating phenotypic differences between the offspring of domesticated, hybrid, and wild Atlantic salmon released into the natural environment, earlier studies have documented the short-term consequences of introgression from domesticated fish into wild salmon populations. However, few studies have investigated the joined product of introgression and natural selection after several generations. Here, we investigated the phenotypic response of an Atlantic salmon population that has been subjected to an average of 24% genetic admixture by domesticated conspecifics escaping from fish farms over three decades (approximately 6-7 generations). Individual levels of admixture were positively correlated with increased size at the smolt and adult stages for both sexes, a decrease in the age of male smolts, and a decrease in the age at maturity for males. These life history changes are presumably the consequence of the well-documented directional selection for increased growth in domesticated salmon and are likely maladaptive. However, the most novel result of this study is that admixture was positively linked with delayed date of return to the river, with highly admixed fish arriving up to 26 days later than nonadmixed fish. Potentially, this phenological change provides admixed individuals with a survival advantage in the later phase of the life cycle as it reduces their period of exposure to selection through rod and line angling. We, therefore, conclude that while gene flow from domesticated conspecifics changes life history and phenological traits of wild Atlantic salmon populations, most of which are likely to be maladaptive, when pressured by additional anthropogenic challenges, some changes may confer a fitness advantage for a short part of the life cycle.

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