May Samuel A, Shedd Kyle R, Gruenthal Kristen M, Hard Jeffrey J, Templin William D, Waters Charles D, Adkison Milo D, Ward Eric J, Habicht Christopher, Wilson Lorna I, Wertheimer Alex C, Westley Peter A H
College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences, University of Alaska Fairbanks, Fairbanks, AK, USA.
Alaska Department of Fish & Game, Anchorage, AK, USA.
R Soc Open Sci. 2024 Jul 3;11(7):240455. doi: 10.1098/rsos.240455. eCollection 2024 Jul.
Hatcheries are vital to many salmon fisheries, with inherent risks and rewards. While hatcheries can increase the returns of adult fish, the demographic and evolutionary consequences for natural populations interacting with hatchery fish on spawning grounds remain unclear. This study examined the impacts of stray hatchery-origin pink salmon on natural population productivity and resilience. We explored temporal assortative mating dynamics using a quantitative genetic model that assumed the only difference between hatchery- and natural-origin adults was their return timing to natural spawning grounds. This model was parameterized with empirical data from an intensive multi-generational study of hatchery-wild interactions in the world's largest pink salmon fisheries enhancement program located in Prince William Sound, Alaska. Across scenarios of increasing hatchery fish presence on spawning grounds, our findings underscore a trade-off between demographic enhancement and preservation of natural population diversity. While enhancement bolstered natural population sizes towards local carrying capacities, hatchery introgression reduced variation in adult return timing by up to 20%. Results indicated that hatchery-origin alleles can rapidly assimilate into natural populations, despite the reduced fitness of hatchery fish attributable to phenotypic mismatches. These findings elucidate the potential for long-term demographic and evolutionary consequences arising from specific hatchery-wild interactions, emphasizing the need for management strategies that balance demographic enhancement with the conservation of natural diversity.
孵化场对许多鲑鱼渔业至关重要,存在着固有的风险和回报。虽然孵化场可以增加成年鱼的数量,但在产卵地与孵化场鱼类相互作用的自然种群的人口统计学和进化后果仍不明确。本研究调查了孵化场来源的粉红鲑鱼对自然种群生产力和恢复力的影响。我们使用定量遗传模型探索了时间性选型交配动态,该模型假设孵化场来源和自然来源的成年鱼之间的唯一区别是它们返回自然产卵地的时间。该模型是根据阿拉斯加威廉王子湾世界上最大的粉红鲑鱼渔业增殖计划中关于孵化场与野生鱼类相互作用的多代密集研究的实证数据进行参数化的。在产卵场孵化场鱼类数量增加的各种情况下,我们的研究结果强调了在人口增长和自然种群多样性保护之间的权衡。虽然增殖措施使自然种群数量接近当地承载能力,但孵化场基因渗入使成年鱼返回时间的变化减少了多达20%。结果表明,尽管孵化场鱼类由于表型不匹配而适应性降低,但孵化场来源的等位基因仍能迅速融入自然种群。这些发现阐明了特定孵化场与野生鱼类相互作用可能产生的长期人口统计学和进化后果,强调了需要制定平衡人口增长与自然多样性保护的管理策略。