期刊
AQUACULTURE
卷 296, 期 1-2, 页码 27-35出版社
ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.aquaculture.2009.08.002
关键词
Mate choice; Siblings; Broodstock management; Genetic heterozygosity; Inbreeding; Haddock; Melanogrammus aeglefinus
资金
- Government of Canada through the Canadian Biotechnology Strategy and Fisheries and Oceans Canada
The potential for relatedness to play a role in haddock (Melanogrammus aeglefinus) mate selection was tested in order to examine the potential for inbreeding in the culturing of this species. A total of 14 egg batches were produced in a communal spawning tank containing three full-sibling families over a 22 day period. Three females and seven males participated in these matings among the five females and eight males present. Based on genotyping results of fertilized eggs, there was no preference for mating with unrelated individuals (i.e. no avoidance of mating with siblings). The maximum number of males contributing to the fertilization success of an egg batch was three but with a single dominant male fertilizing a majority of the eggs for each batch. Only three of the egg batches produced appeared to have been fertilized entirely by a single male. The degree of relatedness among F, commercial haddock broodstock was investigated relative to that of wild Bay of Fundy haddock. This comparison was intended to estimate how rapidly inbreeding could accumulate in a haddock population under cultivation when limited control was exerted over the actual communal mating. Allele richness (standardized numbers of alleles) was markedly lower in the aquaculture samples relative to the wild population (by approximately 25%). The size-selected F, haddock sample exhibited slightly lower levels of observed heterozygosity and gene diversity than a random sample of F, haddock, but marginally higher allele richness. The reduced family diversity coupled with the fact that haddock do not appear to avoid mating with kin could potentially lead to a high degree of inbreeding in the absence of the infusion of additional wild broodstock. Crown Copyright (C) 2009 Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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