Spawn date explains variation in growth rate among families of hatchery reared Hood River steelhead (Oncorhynchus mykiss)

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作者
Neil F. Thompson
Mark R. Christie
Melanie L. Marine
Lyle D. Curtis
Michael S. Blouin
机构
[1] Oregon State University,Department of Integrative Biology
[2] Purdue University,Department of Biological Sciences and Department of Forestry and Natural Resources
[3] Vanderbilt University,Vanderbilt
[4] Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife,Ingram Cancer Center
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Salmon; Conservation; Domestication; Genetics;
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摘要
Body size at release for hatchery-reared steelhead is positively correlated with probability of survival to return as an adult. Although the relationship between body size and survival is well documented, little is known about what factors influence growth in the hatchery at the family level. We test if parent length, parent type (hatchery or natural), parent run date, or date of spawning correlate with among-family variation in offspring growth in the hatchery. Using Hood River winter steelhead (Oncorhynchus mykiss), two experiments were performed over two brood years. No effect of father length, parental type, or parental run date was found on offspring length in either year. Mother length was positively correlated with offspring length during both brood years and egg size data suggest this result occurs because longer females have larger eggs (i.e., it is a maternal effect). Although run date of parents was not correlated with offspring size, the date of spawning was negatively correlated with offspring size in a year with a protracted spawning season. Families spawned later in the season were smaller than those spawned earlier even though all fish began feeding on the same date. The spawn date effect lasted surprisingly long, being correlated with offspring size one year after spawning. A possible explanation for the spawn date effect is that eggs from early-spawned families were reared in chilled water to slow development so all families would begin feeding on the same date (a common hatchery practice). Colder water could have reduced metabolic costs and provided a surplus of energy to be used for somatic growth. This study highlights a little-studied environmental effect that could have large effects on long-term growth rates for hatchery-reared O. mykiss.
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页码:581 / 591
页数:10
相关论文
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  • [1] Spawn date explains variation in growth rate among families of hatchery reared Hood River steelhead (Oncorhynchus mykiss)
    Thompson, Neil F.
    Christie, Mark R.
    Marine, Melanie L.
    Curtis, Lyle D.
    Blouin, Michael S.
    [J]. ENVIRONMENTAL BIOLOGY OF FISHES, 2016, 99 (6-7) : 581 - 591
  • [2] Behavioural type in newly emerged steelhead Oncorhynchus mykiss does not predict growth rate in a conventional hatchery rearing environment
    Conrad, J. L.
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    [J]. JOURNAL OF FISH BIOLOGY, 2009, 75 (06) : 1410 - 1426
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    Hearn, Alex R.
    Chapman, Eric D.
    Peterson, Matthew L.
    LaCivita, Peter E.
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    Bremner, Allison
    Klimley, A. P.
    [J]. ENVIRONMENTAL BIOLOGY OF FISHES, 2013, 96 (2-3) : 363 - 379
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    Gabriel P. Singer
    Alex R. Hearn
    Eric D. Chapman
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    A. P. Klimley
    [J]. Environmental Biology of Fishes, 2013, 96 : 363 - 379