Population-specific
variation in body dimensions of adult chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus
tshawytscha) from New Zealand and their source population, 90 years after
introduction
Michael Kinnison, Martin Unwin, Nelson Boustead, and Thomas Quinn
Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci./J. Can. Sci. Halieut. Aquat. 55(3): 554-563 (1998)
Abstract: Chinook
salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) transplanted from the Sacramento
River, California, U.S.A., to New Zealand in the 1900s colonized many South
Island rivers, which now show significant population-specific phenotypic
variation. To characterize this variation, we conducted a morphometric analysis
of two New Zealand populations and the fall-run Battle Creek population at the
Coleman Hatchery, the apparent ancestral stock. Variation in length at age,
weight at length, fin lengths, hump depth, snout length, and caudal peduncle
width was detected among populations. Sexually mature Battle Creek and New
Zealand chinook salmon were consistently identifiable from morphometric data
(97.7% classification accuracy), largely through differences in caudal peduncle
width and hump depth. The two New Zealand spawning populations, although
distinguishable in morphology in 1994 (mean of 80% correct classification), did
not classify as well using the same discriminant functions in 1995 (mean of
62.7% correct), suggesting interannual multivariate effects. Little variation
was observed between the two mainstem river populations in adults collected
shortly after entering freshwater. Although the genetic or environmental causes
for the differences between populations have yet to be determined, our results
provide empirical evidence of phenotypic divergence over decadal time scales.
This work may be relevant to considerations in the development and monitoring
of salmon recovery and conservation programs.