Quantitative genetic
variation and genotype by environment interaction of embryo development rate in
pink salmon (Oncorhynchus gorbuscha)
K.P. Hebert, P.L. Goddard, W.W. Smoker, and A.J. Gharrett
Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci./J. Can. Sci. Halieut. Aquat. 55(9): 2048-2057 (1998)
Abstract: Quantitative
genetic variation of development rate was evident among 20 half-sib and 40
full-sib families within each of two seasonally separate components of a
population of pink salmon (Oncorhynchus gorbuscha) (Ho: no
sire effect on temperature units at hatch, P < 0.02). Differences
between averages of families spawned 3 weeks apart may have had genetic or
environmental sources (e.g., in constant 8°C, early embryos hatched at 606
temperature units, and late embryos, at 625). Statistical interactions between
paternal effects and environment (embryos were cultured in four temperature
regimes, two simulated natural regimes and two constant temperatures; Ho:
no sire by regime interaction effect on temperature units at hatch, P
< 0.09) were weak evidence that genotype by environment interactions
contributed to variation. Paternal effects in analysis of variance (evidence of
additive genetic variation) were detected only at later stages. Evidences of
genetic variation and of interactions between genotypes and environments are
pertinent to resource conservation because they suggest that harvest management
or hatchery practice have the potential to reduce genetic variation in salmon
populations.