Reintroduction of spring‐run Chinook salmon in the San Joaquin River: Evaluating genetic and phenotypic effects of captive breeding

Author:

Pregler Kasey C.1ORCID,Clemento Anthony23ORCID,Grill Mike4,Adelizi Paul4,Carlson Stephanie M.1ORCID,Garza John Carlos23ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management University of California, Berkeley Berkeley California USA

2. Institute of Marine Sciences University of California, Santa Cruz Santa Cruz California USA

3. Southwest Fisheries Science Center National Marine Fisheries Service Santa Cruz California USA

4. California Department of Fish and Wildlife Fresno California USA

Abstract

AbstractCaptive‐breeding programs are increasingly implemented to curb population declines but can have unintended negative effects on genetic diversity and phenotypes. Through an analysis of ~10 years of genetic monitoring, pedigree information, and phenotypic data, we evaluated a captive‐breeding program that uses adaptive management to reduce inbreeding and improve captive broodstock performance. A captive‐breeding program was established in 2012 to reintroduce spring‐run Chinook salmon to the southern edge of their range in California's San Joaquin River (SJR), using fish produced each year at the nearby Feather River Hatchery (FRH). We found that the SJR program adequately captured the genetic diversity of the FRH source population and that mate pairings guided by genetic relatedness reduced inbreeding. However, the SJR broodstock reared in captivity had smaller body size at maturity in comparison to the FRH source broodstock which matures at sea, but this effect disappeared when SJR juveniles were released from captivity to mature at sea. Phenotypic traits of SJR female parents also influenced reproductive performance; older mothers and those with smaller eggs had offspring with lower survival. These findings demonstrate that adaptive genetic monitoring and pedigree information can be powerful tools for reducing risks of captive breeding and evaluating program effectiveness.

Funder

California Department of Fish and Wildlife

Publisher

Wiley

Reference62 articles.

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5. Multi-generational evaluation of genetic diversity and parentage in captive southern pygmy perch (Nannoperca australis)

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