Impact of naturally spawning captive-bred Atlantic salmon on wild populations: depressed recruitment and increased risk of climate-mediated extinction

The assessment report of the 4th International Panel on Climate Change confirms that global warming is strongly affecting biological systems and that 20–30% of species risk extinction from projected future increases in temperature. It is essential that any measures taken to conserve individual speci...

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Main Authors: McGinnity, Philip, Jennings, Eleanor, de Eyto, Elvira, Allott, Norman, Samuelson, Patrick, Rogan, Gerard, Whelan, Ken, Cross, Tom
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Royal Society Publishing 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.dkit.ie/id/eprint/55/
https://eprints.dkit.ie/id/eprint/55/1/McGinnity_et_al_2009.pdf
http://rspb.royalsocietypublishing.org/
id ftdundalkit:oai:eprints.dkit.ie:55
record_format openpolar
spelling ftdundalkit:oai:eprints.dkit.ie:55 2024-09-15T17:56:18+00:00 Impact of naturally spawning captive-bred Atlantic salmon on wild populations: depressed recruitment and increased risk of climate-mediated extinction McGinnity, Philip Jennings, Eleanor de Eyto, Elvira Allott, Norman Samuelson, Patrick Rogan, Gerard Whelan, Ken Cross, Tom 2009-07-29 application/pdf https://eprints.dkit.ie/id/eprint/55/ https://eprints.dkit.ie/id/eprint/55/1/McGinnity_et_al_2009.pdf http://rspb.royalsocietypublishing.org/ en eng Royal Society Publishing https://eprints.dkit.ie/id/eprint/55/1/McGinnity_et_al_2009.pdf McGinnity, Philip and Jennings, Eleanor and de Eyto, Elvira and Allott, Norman and Samuelson, Patrick and Rogan, Gerard and Whelan, Ken and Cross, Tom (2009) Impact of naturally spawning captive-bred Atlantic salmon on wild populations: depressed recruitment and increased risk of climate-mediated extinction. Proceedings of the Royal Society B (276). pp. 3601-3610. ISSN 3601–3610 10.1098/rspb.2009.0799 Biology Science Article PeerReviewed 2009 ftdundalkit 2024-08-01T03:01:51Z The assessment report of the 4th International Panel on Climate Change confirms that global warming is strongly affecting biological systems and that 20–30% of species risk extinction from projected future increases in temperature. It is essential that any measures taken to conserve individual species and their constituent populations against climate-mediated declines are appropriate. The release of captive bred animals to augment wild populations is a widespread management strategy for many species but has proven controversial. Using a regression model based on a 37-year study of wild and sea ranched Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) spawning together in the wild, we show that the escape of captive bred animals into the wild can substantially depress recruitment and more specifically disrupt the capacity of natural populations to adapt to higher winter water temperatures associated with climate variability. We speculate the mechanisms underlying this seasonal response and suggest that an explanation based on bio-energetic processes with physiological responses synchronized by photoperiod is plausible. Furthermore, we predict, by running the model forward using projected future climate scenarios, that these cultured fish substantially increase the risk of extinction for the studied population within 20 generations. In contrast, we show that positive outcomes to climate change are possible if captive bred animals are prevented from breeding in the wild. Rather than imposing an additional genetic load on wild populations by releasing maladapted captive bred animals, we propose that conservation efforts should focus on optimizing conditions for adaptation to occur by reducing exploitation and protecting critical habitats. Our findings are likely to hold true for most poikilothermic species where captive breeding programmes are used in population management. Article in Journal/Newspaper Atlantic salmon Salmo salar Dundalk Institute of Technology: STÓR
institution Open Polar
collection Dundalk Institute of Technology: STÓR
op_collection_id ftdundalkit
language English
topic Biology
Science
spellingShingle Biology
Science
McGinnity, Philip
Jennings, Eleanor
de Eyto, Elvira
Allott, Norman
Samuelson, Patrick
Rogan, Gerard
Whelan, Ken
Cross, Tom
Impact of naturally spawning captive-bred Atlantic salmon on wild populations: depressed recruitment and increased risk of climate-mediated extinction
topic_facet Biology
Science
description The assessment report of the 4th International Panel on Climate Change confirms that global warming is strongly affecting biological systems and that 20–30% of species risk extinction from projected future increases in temperature. It is essential that any measures taken to conserve individual species and their constituent populations against climate-mediated declines are appropriate. The release of captive bred animals to augment wild populations is a widespread management strategy for many species but has proven controversial. Using a regression model based on a 37-year study of wild and sea ranched Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) spawning together in the wild, we show that the escape of captive bred animals into the wild can substantially depress recruitment and more specifically disrupt the capacity of natural populations to adapt to higher winter water temperatures associated with climate variability. We speculate the mechanisms underlying this seasonal response and suggest that an explanation based on bio-energetic processes with physiological responses synchronized by photoperiod is plausible. Furthermore, we predict, by running the model forward using projected future climate scenarios, that these cultured fish substantially increase the risk of extinction for the studied population within 20 generations. In contrast, we show that positive outcomes to climate change are possible if captive bred animals are prevented from breeding in the wild. Rather than imposing an additional genetic load on wild populations by releasing maladapted captive bred animals, we propose that conservation efforts should focus on optimizing conditions for adaptation to occur by reducing exploitation and protecting critical habitats. Our findings are likely to hold true for most poikilothermic species where captive breeding programmes are used in population management.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author McGinnity, Philip
Jennings, Eleanor
de Eyto, Elvira
Allott, Norman
Samuelson, Patrick
Rogan, Gerard
Whelan, Ken
Cross, Tom
author_facet McGinnity, Philip
Jennings, Eleanor
de Eyto, Elvira
Allott, Norman
Samuelson, Patrick
Rogan, Gerard
Whelan, Ken
Cross, Tom
author_sort McGinnity, Philip
title Impact of naturally spawning captive-bred Atlantic salmon on wild populations: depressed recruitment and increased risk of climate-mediated extinction
title_short Impact of naturally spawning captive-bred Atlantic salmon on wild populations: depressed recruitment and increased risk of climate-mediated extinction
title_full Impact of naturally spawning captive-bred Atlantic salmon on wild populations: depressed recruitment and increased risk of climate-mediated extinction
title_fullStr Impact of naturally spawning captive-bred Atlantic salmon on wild populations: depressed recruitment and increased risk of climate-mediated extinction
title_full_unstemmed Impact of naturally spawning captive-bred Atlantic salmon on wild populations: depressed recruitment and increased risk of climate-mediated extinction
title_sort impact of naturally spawning captive-bred atlantic salmon on wild populations: depressed recruitment and increased risk of climate-mediated extinction
publisher Royal Society Publishing
publishDate 2009
url https://eprints.dkit.ie/id/eprint/55/
https://eprints.dkit.ie/id/eprint/55/1/McGinnity_et_al_2009.pdf
http://rspb.royalsocietypublishing.org/
genre Atlantic salmon
Salmo salar
genre_facet Atlantic salmon
Salmo salar
op_relation https://eprints.dkit.ie/id/eprint/55/1/McGinnity_et_al_2009.pdf
McGinnity, Philip and Jennings, Eleanor and de Eyto, Elvira and Allott, Norman and Samuelson, Patrick and Rogan, Gerard and Whelan, Ken and Cross, Tom (2009) Impact of naturally spawning captive-bred Atlantic salmon on wild populations: depressed recruitment and increased risk of climate-mediated extinction. Proceedings of the Royal Society B (276). pp. 3601-3610. ISSN 3601–3610
10.1098/rspb.2009.0799
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