Résumé
Salmonid fishes aggregate for breeding at spatially defined, suitable habitats. These aggregations may evolve into discrete populations when precise natal homing leads to reproductive isolation, and local regimes of selection lead to adaptation. Population structure is often defined by persistent differences in selectively neutral genetic markers and in mean values of morphological and life-history traits between locations. This approach is limited by the spatial scale at which traits diverge; low levels of reproductively successful straying, combined with similar selective pressures on life-history traits resulting from similar habitat features and environmental conditions, can significantly reduce the power of these discriminatory methods. We compared data on three life-history traits and polymorphism of DNA microsatellites for evidence of population subdivision among sockeye salmon spawning on spatially discrete but physically similar beaches on islands in Iliamna Lake, Alaska. We found small but significant differences in average body length, body depth and age composition between sites as well as significant interactions between site and year. These interactions, reflecting random variation in growth or recruitment among sites, are a powerful tool for discriminating populations with similar mean trait values. These results suggest fine-scale homing to natal sites, but the microsatellite data revealed no evidence of restricted gene flow among sites. There seems to be enough straying among the populations to prevent differentiation at neutral traits but enough homing for them to be functionally distinct.
Langue d'origine | English |
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Pages (de-à) | 77-85 |
Nombre de pages | 9 |
Journal | Environmental Biology of Fishes |
Volume | 67 |
Numéro de publication | 1 |
DOI | |
Statut de publication | Published - mai 1 2003 |
Note bibliographique
Funding Information:We thank Warner Lew, Greg Buck and all the other field staff who helped collect the data used in this analysis, Brenda Rogers for reading many of the otoliths, Pat H. Poe for providing extensive assistance with historical data, John Skalski for statistical advice, Ingrid Spies for laboratory help, and Ray Hilborn for comments on this manuscript. This research was funded in part by the Pacific Seafood Processors Association through their long-term financial support of the Fisheries Research Institute and by the National Science Foundation’s Long Term Research in Environmental Biology program, grant # DEB-0128902.
ASJC Scopus Subject Areas
- Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
- Aquatic Science