Egg size, fecundity,
and development rate of two introduced New Zealand chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus
tshawytscha) populations
Michael T. Kinnison, Martin J. Unwin, William K. Hershberger, and Thomas P.
Quinn
Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci./J. Can. Sci. Halieut. Aquat. 55(8): 1946-1953 (1998)
Abstract: Interpopulation
differences in several adult phenotypic traits suggest that New Zealand (NZ)
chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) are evolving into distinct
populations. To further investigate this hypothesis, we compared egg sizes,
fecundities, and early development rates of chinook from two NZ streams. The
two NZ study populations differed in size-adjusted egg weight and gonadosomatic
index, but not in size-adjusted fecundity. Egg weight, fecundity, and
gonadosomatic index values for both NZ populations were different than values
for chinook from Battle Creek, California, the population regarded as the
ancestral NZ stock. In contrast, there was little evidence of divergence in juvenile
development. Time to hatching did not differ between the two NZ study
populations and heritability estimates were small with large standard errors.
Evidence of a small difference in alevin growth rate may have represented an
effect of yolk conversion mechanics related to egg size. Despite the similarity
in development rates under shared conditions, modeling based on temperature
records suggests that emergence dates in the two NZ streams may differ by 4-6
weeks, yielding significant phenotypic differences.