Two components of Northeast Atlantic herring within the same school during spawning: support for the existence of a metapopulation?
It has been hypothesized that some stocks of Atlantic herring are subject to genetic exchange and therefore should fit the definition of a metapopulation with subunits. Genetic exchange requires spatial overlap of individuals from different populations during spawning. We investigated a local herrin...
Main Authors: | , , |
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Other Authors: | |
Format: | Text |
Language: | English |
Published: |
2009
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Online Access: | http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.1027.7854 http://icesjms.oxfordjournals.org/content/66/8/1740.full.pdf |
Summary: | It has been hypothesized that some stocks of Atlantic herring are subject to genetic exchange and therefore should fit the definition of a metapopulation with subunits. Genetic exchange requires spatial overlap of individuals from different populations during spawning. We investigated a local herring population that is assumed to feed and spawn within the semi-enclosed marine ecosystem of Lindåspollene in west Norway, which is connected with the outer fjord only by a narrow sill. Acoustic recordings and gillnet samples demonstrated the mixed presence of two components within a single school throughout the spawning period 2005– 2007. Members of the two components were of about the same size and in a similar stage of gonad development at all times, but the age composition was completely different. These observations represent the first documented case of different components being present in a spawning school and provide strong indications of regular interbreeding. Our data suggest that the two components represent autochthonous Lindås herring and allochthonous herring of coastal/oceanic origin, thereby supporting the metapopulation concept. Two alternative explanations, based on one migratory and one resident component of a single Lindås stock, are also discussed. |
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