Ford Michael J, Murdoch Andrew R, Hughes Michael S, Seamons Todd R, LaHood Eric S
Conservation Biology Division, Northwest Fisheries Science Center, National Marine Fisheries Services, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Seattle, Washington, United States of America.
Supplementation Research Team, Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, Wenatchee, Washington, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2016 Oct 13;11(10):e0164801. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0164801. eCollection 2016.
We used genetic parentage analysis of 6200 potential parents and 5497 juvenile offspring to evaluate the relative reproductive success of hatchery and natural steelhead (Onchorhynchus mykiss) when spawning in the wild between 2008 and 2011 in the Wenatchee River, Washington. Hatchery fish originating from two prior generation hatchery parents had <20% of the reproductive success of natural origin spawners. In contrast, hatchery females originating from a cross between two natural origin parents of the prior generation had equivalent or better reproductive success than natural origin females. Males originating from such a cross had reproductive success of 26-93% that of natural males. The reproductive success of hatchery females and males from crosses consisting of one natural origin fish and one hatchery origin fish was 24-54% that of natural fish. The strong influence of hatchery broodstock origin on reproductive success confirms similar results from a previous study of a different population of the same species and suggests a genetic basis for the low reproductive success of hatchery steelhead, although environmental factors cannot be entirely ruled out. In addition to broodstock origin, fish size, return time, age, and spawning location were significant predictors of reproductive success. Our results indicate that incorporating natural fish into hatchery broodstock is clearly beneficial for improving subsequent natural spawning success, even in a population that has a decades-long history of hatchery releases, as is the case in the Wenatchee River.
我们利用对6200条潜在亲本和5497条幼鱼后代进行的遗传亲权分析,来评估2008年至2011年期间在华盛顿州韦纳奇河野生环境中产卵时,孵化场养殖的虹鳟(Onchorhynchus mykiss)和野生虹鳟的相对繁殖成功率。源自两代之前孵化场亲本的孵化场养殖鱼的繁殖成功率不到野生亲本的20%。相比之下,源自上一代两个野生亲本杂交的孵化场雌性虹鳟的繁殖成功率与野生雌性相当或更高。源自这种杂交的雄性虹鳟的繁殖成功率为野生雄性的26% - 93%。由一条野生亲本鱼和一条孵化场亲本鱼杂交产生的孵化场雌性和雄性虹鳟的繁殖成功率为野生鱼的24% - 54%。孵化场亲鱼来源对繁殖成功率的强烈影响证实了之前对同一物种不同种群研究的类似结果,并表明孵化场养殖虹鳟繁殖成功率低存在遗传基础,尽管不能完全排除环境因素。除了亲鱼来源外,鱼的大小、洄游时间、年龄和产卵地点也是繁殖成功率的重要预测因素。我们的结果表明,将野生鱼纳入孵化场亲鱼群体显然有利于提高后续的自然产卵成功率,即使在像韦纳奇河这样有几十年孵化场放流历史的种群中也是如此。