4.7 Article

Census vs. effective population size in chinook salmon: large- and small-scale environmental perturbation effects

Journal

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
Volume 12, Issue 10, Pages 2571-2583

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-294X.2003.01932.x

Keywords

census population size; chinook salmon; effective population size; genetic diversity; microsatellite

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Population viability has often been assessed by census of reproducing adults. Recently this method has been called into question and estimation of the effective population size (N-e) proposed as a complementary method to determine population health. We examined genetic diversity in five populations of chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) from the upper Fraser River watershed (British Columbia, Canada) at 11 microsatellite loci over 20 years using DNA extracted from archived scale samples. We tested for changes in genetic diversity, calculated the ratio of the number of alleles to the range in allele size to give the statistic M, calculated N-e from the temporal change in allele frequency, used the maximum likelihood method to calculate effective population size (N-e M), calculated the harmonic mean of population size, and compared these statistics to annual census estimates. Over the last two decades population size has increased in all five populations of chinook examined; however, N-e calculated for each population was low (81-691) and decreasing over the time interval measured. Values of N-e M were low, but substantially higher than N-e calculated using the temporal method. The calculated values for M were generally low (M < 0.70), indicating recent population reductions for all five populations. Large-scale historic barriers to migration and development activities do not appear to account for the low values of N-e; however, available spawning area is positively correlated with N-e. Both N-e and M estimates indicate that these populations are potentially susceptible to inbreeding effects and may lack the ability to respond adaptively to stochastic events. Our findings question the practice of relying exclusively on census estimates for interpreting population health and show the importance of determining genetic diversity within populations.

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