Half a century of genetic interaction between farmed and wild Atlantic salmon: Status of knowledge and unanswered questions

  • K. A. Glover
  • , M. F. Solberg
  • , Philip Mcginnity
  • , K Hindar
  • , Eric Verspoor
  • , Mark Coulson
  • , M. M. Hansen
  • , H. Araki
  • , Ø. Skaala
  • , T. Svåsand

Resultado de pesquisa: Articlerevisão de pares

278 Citações (Scopus)

Resumo

Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) is one of the best researched fishes, and its aquaculture plays a global role in the blue revolution. However, since the 1970's, tens of millions of salmon have escaped into the wild. We review current knowledge of genetic interactions and identify the unanswered questions. Native salmon populations are typically genetically distinct from each other, and potentially locally adapted. Farmed salmon represent a limited number of wild source populations that have been exposed to ≥12 generations of domestication. Consequently, farmed and wild salmon differ in many traits including molecular-genetic polymorphisms, growth, morphology, life-history, behaviour, physiology and gene-transcription. Field-experiments have demonstrated that the offspring of farmed salmon display lower life-time fitness in the wild than wild salmon, and that following introgression, there is a reduced production of genetically wild salmon, and potentially, of total salmon production. It is a formidable task to estimate introgression of farmed salmon in wild populations where they are not exotic. New methods have revealed introgression in half of ~150 Norwegian populations, with point estimates as high as 47%, and an unweighted average of 6.4% across 109 populations. Outside Norway, introgression remains unquantified, and in all regions, biological changes and the mechanisms driving population-specific impacts remain poorly documented. Nevertheless, existing knowledge shows that the long-term consequences of introgression is expected to lead to changes in life-history traits, reduced population productivity, and decreased resilience to future challenges. Only a major reduction in the number of escapees, and/or sterility of farmed salmon can eliminate further impacts.
Idioma originalEnglish
Páginas (de-até)890-927
Número de páginas37
RevistaFish and Fisheries
Volume18
Número de emissão5
Data online antecipada10 mar. 2017
DOIs
Estado da publicaçãoPublished - 30 set. 2017

ODS da ONU

Este resultado contribui para o(s) seguinte(s) Objetivo(s) de Desenvolvimento Sustentável

  1. Zero hunger
    Zero hunger
  2. Life below water
    Life below water

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