Multi-generational interactions between escaped farm and wild atlantic salmon: a risk assessment perspective

Project: Research project

Project Details

Description

The general objective of our proposed research is to employ a multidisciplinary approach to assess the potentialgenetic and ecological consequences of interactions between escaped farm and wild Atlantic salmon in NorthAmerica. By combining quantitative genetics, functional genomics, experimental data and computer modeling,our research will represent an extensive effort for evaluating the fitness consequences of hybridization betweenfarm and different wild Atlantic salmon populations over multiple generations, as well as varying levels ofintrogression of non-native farm salmon genes into wild populations. From a risk assessment perspective, ourresearch in the short-term will provide invaluable data on the potential impacts of multi-generationalhybridization between farm and wild Atlantic salmon in North America. In the long-term, the proposedresearch will help to predict how likely it is that genes will move from farm salmon into different wildpopulations. It will also aid in determining the degree to which farm salmon gene introgression mightnegatively affect the persistence and adaptive potential of wild Atlantic salmon populations. Our research will,thus, provide timely information for guiding policy decisions regarding the conservation biology of a memberof one of the most socio-economically and culturally important groups of aquatic species in the northernhemisphere (salmonid fishes).Broadly speaking, our research will contribute to an understanding of: (i) the potential consequences ofhybridization between artificially-selected organisms and populations of their wild relatives; (ii) how genesmight move from artificially-selected organisms to populations of their wild relatives; and (iii) how fitness inpopulations of wild relatives might be reduced through varying degrees hybridization and introgression withartificially-selected organisms. Our work also has implications for other emerging areas of internationalresearch, such as the consequences of interactions between transgenic organisms and their wild relatives.
StatusActive
Effective start/end date1/1/07 → …

Funding

  • Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada: US$159,596.00

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • Genetics
  • Safety, Risk, Reliability and Quality
  • Environmental Science(all)