Data from: The signature of fine scale local adaptation in Atlantic salmon revealed from common garden experiments in nature ...

Understanding the extent, scale and genetic basis of local adaptation (LA) is important for conservation and management. Its relevance in salmonids at microgeographic scales, where dispersal (and hence potential gene flow) can be substantial, has however been questioned. Here, we compare the fitness...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: O'Toole, Ciar L, Reed, Thomas E., Bailie, Deborah, Bradley, Caroline, Cotter, Deirdre, Coughlan, Jamie, Cross, Tom, Dillane, Eileen, McEvoy, Sarah, O'Maoileidigh, Niall, Prodöhl, Paulo, Rogan, Ger, McGinnity, Philip
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: Dryad 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.s171t
https://datadryad.org/stash/dataset/doi:10.5061/dryad.s171t
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Summary:Understanding the extent, scale and genetic basis of local adaptation (LA) is important for conservation and management. Its relevance in salmonids at microgeographic scales, where dispersal (and hence potential gene flow) can be substantial, has however been questioned. Here, we compare the fitness of communally reared offspring of local and foreign Atlantic salmon Salmo salar from adjacent Irish rivers and reciprocal F1 hybrid crosses between them, in the wild ‘home’ environment of the local population. Experimental groups did not differ in wild smolt output but a catastrophic flood event may have limited our ability to detect freshwater performance differences, which were evident in a previous study. Foreign parr exhibited higher, and hybrids intermediate, emigration rates from the natal stream relative to local parr, consistent with genetically based behavioural differences. Adult return rates were lower for the foreign compared to the local group. Overall lifetime success of foreigners and hybrids ... : FamiliesData on crosses to make experimental families and associated phenotypic data on broodstockOffspringData on sampled offspring (inlcuding assigments back to parents) caught at various life stages by electrofishing, in traps, or in the hatchery ...