Nature versus nurture? Consequences of short captivity in early stages
Abstract Biological changes occurring as a consequence of domestication and/or captivity are not still deeply known. In Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar), endangered (Southern Europe) populations are enhanced by supportive breeding, which involves only 6 months of captive rearing following artificial sp...
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doaj-e38b017a56504e43b56d7b8bea7681992021-03-02T08:05:17ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582018-01-018152152910.1002/ece3.3555Nature versus nurture? Consequences of short captivity in early stagesJose L. Horreo0America G. Valiente1Alba Ardura2Aida Blanco3Claudia Garcia‐Gonzalez4Eva Garcia‐Vazquez5Department of Biodiversity and Evolutionary Biology National Museum of Natural Sciences (CSIC) Madrid SpainDepartment of Functional Biology University of Oviedo Oviedo SpainDepartment of Functional Biology University of Oviedo Oviedo SpainDepartment of Functional Biology University of Oviedo Oviedo SpainDepartment of Functional Biology University of Oviedo Oviedo SpainDepartment of Functional Biology University of Oviedo Oviedo SpainAbstract Biological changes occurring as a consequence of domestication and/or captivity are not still deeply known. In Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar), endangered (Southern Europe) populations are enhanced by supportive breeding, which involves only 6 months of captive rearing following artificial spawning of wild‐collected adults. In this work, we assess whether several fitness‐correlated life‐history traits (migratory behavior, straying rate, age at maturity, and growth) are affected by early exposure to the captive environment within a generation, before reproduction thus before genetic selection. Results showed significant differences in growth and migratory behavior (including straying), associated with this very short period of captivity in natural fish populations, changing even genetic variability (decreased in hatchery‐reared adults) and the native population structure within and between rivers of the species. These changes appeared within a single generation, suggesting very short time of captivity is enough for initiating changes normally attributed to domestication. These results may have potential implications for the long‐term population stability/viability of species subjected to restoration and enhancement processes and could be also considered for the management of zoo populations.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.3555domesticationfitnessisotopemigrationpopulation restorationreintroduction |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Jose L. Horreo America G. Valiente Alba Ardura Aida Blanco Claudia Garcia‐Gonzalez Eva Garcia‐Vazquez |
spellingShingle |
Jose L. Horreo America G. Valiente Alba Ardura Aida Blanco Claudia Garcia‐Gonzalez Eva Garcia‐Vazquez Nature versus nurture? Consequences of short captivity in early stages Ecology and Evolution domestication fitness isotope migration population restoration reintroduction |
author_facet |
Jose L. Horreo America G. Valiente Alba Ardura Aida Blanco Claudia Garcia‐Gonzalez Eva Garcia‐Vazquez |
author_sort |
Jose L. Horreo |
title |
Nature versus nurture? Consequences of short captivity in early stages |
title_short |
Nature versus nurture? Consequences of short captivity in early stages |
title_full |
Nature versus nurture? Consequences of short captivity in early stages |
title_fullStr |
Nature versus nurture? Consequences of short captivity in early stages |
title_full_unstemmed |
Nature versus nurture? Consequences of short captivity in early stages |
title_sort |
nature versus nurture? consequences of short captivity in early stages |
publisher |
Wiley |
series |
Ecology and Evolution |
issn |
2045-7758 |
publishDate |
2018-01-01 |
description |
Abstract Biological changes occurring as a consequence of domestication and/or captivity are not still deeply known. In Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar), endangered (Southern Europe) populations are enhanced by supportive breeding, which involves only 6 months of captive rearing following artificial spawning of wild‐collected adults. In this work, we assess whether several fitness‐correlated life‐history traits (migratory behavior, straying rate, age at maturity, and growth) are affected by early exposure to the captive environment within a generation, before reproduction thus before genetic selection. Results showed significant differences in growth and migratory behavior (including straying), associated with this very short period of captivity in natural fish populations, changing even genetic variability (decreased in hatchery‐reared adults) and the native population structure within and between rivers of the species. These changes appeared within a single generation, suggesting very short time of captivity is enough for initiating changes normally attributed to domestication. These results may have potential implications for the long‐term population stability/viability of species subjected to restoration and enhancement processes and could be also considered for the management of zoo populations. |
topic |
domestication fitness isotope migration population restoration reintroduction |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.3555 |
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