Perry William Bernard, Kaufmann Joshka, Solberg Monica Favnebøe, Brodie Christopher, Coral Medina Angela Maria, Pillay Kirthana, Egerton Anna, Harvey Alison, Phillips Karl P, Coughlan Jamie, Egan Fintan, Grealis Ronan, Hutton Steve, Leseur Floriane, Ryan Sarah, Poole Russell, Rogan Ger, Ryder Elizabeth, Schaal Patrick, Waters Catherine, Wynne Robert, Taylor Martin, Prodöhl Paulo, Creer Simon, Llewellyn Martin, McGinnity Philip, Carvalho Gary, Glover Kevin Alan
Molecular Ecology and Fisheries Genetics Laboratory School of Biological Science Bangor University Bangor, Gwynedd UK.
Water Research Institute School of Biosciences Cardiff University Cardiff UK.
Evol Appl. 2021 Sep 21;14(9):2319-2332. doi: 10.1111/eva.13297. eCollection 2021 Sep.
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.
驯化会导致养殖计划中定向选择的性状发生变化,不过非生产性状也可能出现无意的改变。在逃逸鱼类的后代以及任何杂交后代中,这些无意改变的性状可能会降低其在野外的适应性。大西洋鲑养殖计划始于20世纪70年代初,导致多个性状发生了遗传变化。然而,驯化对眼睛大小的影响尚未得到研究。我们在两个国家的淡水和咸水环境下,通过六个共同花园实验,测量了4000条鲑鱼经体型校正后的眼睛大小。在这些共同花园中,将驯化亲本和野生亲本的后代进行杂交,产生了11个具有不同遗传背景(野生、驯化、F1杂种、F2杂种和回交)的品系。经大小调整后的眼睛大小受遗传和环境因素的影响。在淡水和海洋环境中,以及在爱尔兰和挪威的实验中,与在相同条件下饲养的野生鱼类相比,在人工条件下饲养的驯化鱼类经调整后的眼睛较小。然而,对于孵化后不久被引入河流环境并在第一个夏季末取样的幼鲑,在遗传群体之间观察到的经调整眼睛大小的差异幅度较小,对于在入海前立即在河流中取样的2岁洄游海鲑来说并不显著。总体而言,我们的研究结果可能表明,在存在自然选择的情况下,眼睛较小的个体适应性较差,因此适应性降低,这基于我们对家养鲑鱼后代(包括杂交后代)在野外适应性明显降低的潜在机制的理解。