Title of article :
The genetic consequences of hatchery-induced sperm competition in a salmonid Original Research Article
Author/Authors :
Claus Wedekind، نويسنده , , Geir Rudolfsen، نويسنده , , Alain Jacob، نويسنده , , Davnah Urbach، نويسنده , , Rudolf Müller، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages :
9
From page :
180
To page :
188
Abstract :
Supportive breeding is an important tool in conservation management, but its long-term genetic consequences are not well understood. Among the factors that could affect the genetics of the offspring is sperm competition as a consequence of mixed-milt fertilizations – which is still a common practice in many hatcheries. Here, we measured and combined the relevant factors to predict the genetic consequences of various kinds of hatchery-induced sperm competition. We drew a random sample of male Coregonus zugensis (an Alpine whitefish) from a hatchery program and quantified their in vitro sperm potency by integrating sperm velocity during the first minute after activation, and their in vitro milt potency by multiplying sperm potency with milt volume and sperm cell density. We found that not controlling for sperm density and/or milt volume would, at a constant population size, decrease the variance effective number of male breeders Nem by around 40–50%. This loss would decrease with increasing population growth rates. Partial multi-factorial breeding and the separate rearing of in total 799 batches of eggs revealed that neither sperm nor milt potency was significantly linked to egg survival. Sperm and milt potency was also not significantly correlated to other potential quality measures such as breeding tubercles or condition factor. However, sperm potency was correlated to male age and milt potency to male growth rate. Our findings suggest that hatchery-induced sperm competition not only increases the loss of genetic variation but may also induce artificial selection, depending on the fertilization protocol. By not equalizing milt volume in multi-male fertilization hatchery managers lose relatively more genetic variation and give fast-growing males a reproductive advantage, while equalizing milt volume reduces the loss of genetic variation and favors younger males who may have fast sperm to compensate for their subdominance at the spawning place.
Keywords :
salmonids , Good genes sexual selection , Genetically benign spawning protocols , sperm competition , Hatchery management , Sperm velocity , Male mating strategies , reproductive investment
Journal title :
Biological Conservation
Serial Year :
2007
Journal title :
Biological Conservation
Record number :
837894
Link To Document :
بازگشت