Conséquences génétiques de la production de larves d'huîtres en écloserie : étude des processus de dérive et de sélection

Previous studies have shown heritable variation in larval developmental traits in the Pacific oyster Crassostrea gigas. In order to study the genetic consequences of production of oyster larvae in hatcheries, two factors, specific to hatcheries, were examined: the effect of discarding the smallest l...

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Main Authors: Taris, Nicolas, Sauvage, Christopher, Batista, Frederico, Baron, Sophie, Ernande, Bruno, Haffray, Pierrick, Boudry, Pierre
Format: Conference Object
Language:French
Published: Actes du 6e colloque national BRG, La Rochelle, 2-3-4 octobre 2006 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00000/1505/1139.pdf
https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00000/1505/
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author Taris, Nicolas
Sauvage, Christopher
Batista, Frederico
Baron, Sophie
Ernande, Bruno
Haffray, Pierrick
Boudry, Pierre
author_facet Taris, Nicolas
Sauvage, Christopher
Batista, Frederico
Baron, Sophie
Ernande, Bruno
Haffray, Pierrick
Boudry, Pierre
author_sort Taris, Nicolas
collection Archimer (Archive Institutionnelle de l'Ifremer - Institut français de recherche pour l'exploitation de la mer)
description Previous studies have shown heritable variation in larval developmental traits in the Pacific oyster Crassostrea gigas. In order to study the genetic consequences of production of oyster larvae in hatcheries, two factors, specific to hatcheries, were examined: the effect of discarding the smallest larvae (i.e. culling) and the effect of temperature (20°C versus 26°C). A mixed-family approach was used in order to infer the genetic composition of larval populations and family assignment, limiting possible environmental bias and allowing the study of a relatively large number of families using a limited number of larval tanks. Our results show that three multiplexed highly polymorphic microsatellite markers are a powerful tool for family assignment and, consequently, for the study of bivalve larvae genetics. Culling, by selective sieving of the smallest larvae is an advantageous practice at a phenotypic scale as it reduced variance in larval size, variance of developmental rate and time to settlement. Culling of 50% of the larval population only led to 15% less spat, showing a positive phenotypic correlation between larval growth and settlement success. However, culling represents a substantial risk for diversity loss, because it increases the variance of reproductive success among parental oysters. The effective population sizes of early settling cohorts of settlement were lower than those of later ones. Our results show that the settlement of slow growing larvae significantly contributes to minimizing the variability of reproductive success and therefore to maximizing genetic diversity. These results corroborate the low estimations of variability of broodstocks sampled in several French commercial hatcheries, relative to natural populations. The genetic composition of the larval population and the resulting spat was significantly different between the two tested temperatures, revealing genotype x environment interaction for survival. Similarly, genotype x environment interaction was also observed for larval ...
format Conference Object
genre Crassostrea gigas
Pacific oyster
genre_facet Crassostrea gigas
Pacific oyster
geographic Pacific
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op_relation https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00000/1505/1139.pdf
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publishDate 2006
publisher Actes du 6e colloque national BRG, La Rochelle, 2-3-4 octobre 2006
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spelling ftarchimer:oai:archimer.ifremer.fr:1505 2025-04-06T14:50:33+00:00 Conséquences génétiques de la production de larves d'huîtres en écloserie : étude des processus de dérive et de sélection Taris, Nicolas Sauvage, Christopher Batista, Frederico Baron, Sophie Ernande, Bruno Haffray, Pierrick Boudry, Pierre 2006-10-02 application/pdf https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00000/1505/1139.pdf https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00000/1505/ fre fre Actes du 6e colloque national BRG, La Rochelle, 2-3-4 octobre 2006 https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00000/1505/1139.pdf https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00000/1505/ info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess restricted use Hatchery Genetic diversity Selection domestication Larvae Crassostrea gigas Ecloserie Diversité génétique Sélection domestication Larve text Proceedings paper info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject 2006 ftarchimer 2025-03-13T05:23:13Z Previous studies have shown heritable variation in larval developmental traits in the Pacific oyster Crassostrea gigas. In order to study the genetic consequences of production of oyster larvae in hatcheries, two factors, specific to hatcheries, were examined: the effect of discarding the smallest larvae (i.e. culling) and the effect of temperature (20°C versus 26°C). A mixed-family approach was used in order to infer the genetic composition of larval populations and family assignment, limiting possible environmental bias and allowing the study of a relatively large number of families using a limited number of larval tanks. Our results show that three multiplexed highly polymorphic microsatellite markers are a powerful tool for family assignment and, consequently, for the study of bivalve larvae genetics. Culling, by selective sieving of the smallest larvae is an advantageous practice at a phenotypic scale as it reduced variance in larval size, variance of developmental rate and time to settlement. Culling of 50% of the larval population only led to 15% less spat, showing a positive phenotypic correlation between larval growth and settlement success. However, culling represents a substantial risk for diversity loss, because it increases the variance of reproductive success among parental oysters. The effective population sizes of early settling cohorts of settlement were lower than those of later ones. Our results show that the settlement of slow growing larvae significantly contributes to minimizing the variability of reproductive success and therefore to maximizing genetic diversity. These results corroborate the low estimations of variability of broodstocks sampled in several French commercial hatcheries, relative to natural populations. The genetic composition of the larval population and the resulting spat was significantly different between the two tested temperatures, revealing genotype x environment interaction for survival. Similarly, genotype x environment interaction was also observed for larval ... Conference Object Crassostrea gigas Pacific oyster Archimer (Archive Institutionnelle de l'Ifremer - Institut français de recherche pour l'exploitation de la mer) Pacific
spellingShingle Hatchery
Genetic diversity
Selection domestication
Larvae
Crassostrea gigas
Ecloserie
Diversité génétique
Sélection domestication
Larve
Taris, Nicolas
Sauvage, Christopher
Batista, Frederico
Baron, Sophie
Ernande, Bruno
Haffray, Pierrick
Boudry, Pierre
Conséquences génétiques de la production de larves d'huîtres en écloserie : étude des processus de dérive et de sélection
title Conséquences génétiques de la production de larves d'huîtres en écloserie : étude des processus de dérive et de sélection
title_full Conséquences génétiques de la production de larves d'huîtres en écloserie : étude des processus de dérive et de sélection
title_fullStr Conséquences génétiques de la production de larves d'huîtres en écloserie : étude des processus de dérive et de sélection
title_full_unstemmed Conséquences génétiques de la production de larves d'huîtres en écloserie : étude des processus de dérive et de sélection
title_short Conséquences génétiques de la production de larves d'huîtres en écloserie : étude des processus de dérive et de sélection
title_sort conséquences génétiques de la production de larves d'huîtres en écloserie : étude des processus de dérive et de sélection
topic Hatchery
Genetic diversity
Selection domestication
Larvae
Crassostrea gigas
Ecloserie
Diversité génétique
Sélection domestication
Larve
topic_facet Hatchery
Genetic diversity
Selection domestication
Larvae
Crassostrea gigas
Ecloserie
Diversité génétique
Sélection domestication
Larve
url https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00000/1505/1139.pdf
https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00000/1505/