Quantitative genetic basis for resistance to Caligus rogercresseyi sea lice in a breeding population of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar)

Artículo de publicación ISI A total of 1511 Atlantic salmon smolts representing 75 full-sib and 40 half-sib families from the Antares S.A. breeding programwere challengedwith Caligus rogercresseyi in order to assess the quantitative genetic components of resistance to infection by this parasite. Aft...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Aquaculture
Main Authors: Lhorente, Jean Paul, Gallardo, José A., Villanueva, Beatriz, Araya, Angélica M., Torrealba, Débora A., Toledo, Ximena E., Neira Roa, Roberto
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2012
Subjects:
Isi
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aquaculture.2011.10.046
https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/120194
Description
Summary:Artículo de publicación ISI A total of 1511 Atlantic salmon smolts representing 75 full-sib and 40 half-sib families from the Antares S.A. breeding programwere challengedwith Caligus rogercresseyi in order to assess the quantitative genetic components of resistance to infection by this parasite. After threeweeks of acclimatization in the experimental hatchery conditions, fish were distributed in three 6-m3 tanks, with an equal number of fish per family per tank. An infection rate of 100 copepods per fish was used for the experiment. Resistance/susceptibility was recorded individually at approximately 5 days (range=4–7 days) after infestation as the number of sessile lice per fish on all fins (FSL), the estimated total number of sessile lice per fish (TSL), and the total number of sessile lice per fish per unit of body weight (TSL/BWs). Resistance/susceptibility was also recorded at approximately 25 days (range=24–26 days) after infestation as the total number of mobile lice per fish (TML) and the total number of mobile lice per fish per unit of body weight (TML/BWm). The level of infestation on days 5 and 25 postinfestationwas 30.7 (SD=16.3) sessile parasites (TSL) and 13.2 (SD=6.0)mobile parasites (TML), respectively. A high level of phenotypic variationwas observed for parasite load traitswhen considering fin and total counts as well as counts per unit of body weight (CV=46–56%). Significant differences between tanks (Pb0.05) were observed in FSL and TSL.Weightwas included as a covariate (Pb0.05)when performing the genetic analysis on FSL, TSL and TML. Estimated heritabilities for parasite counts in the sessile stage were of low to medium magnitude (0.22–0.34), whereas in the mobile stage heritabilities were very low (0.03–0.06) and not significantly different from zero (P>0.05). The genetic correlations between parasite counts in the sessile (FSL, TSL) and the mobile (TML) stages were very high (0.99). Also, body weight shows a high genetic correlation with fish parasite count measured at both the ...