美国密歇根湖野生鳕鱼和孵化场饲养的鳕鱼的形态差异

IF 2 3区 农林科学 Q2 FISHERIES
Andrew E. Honsey, Yu-Chun Kao, Chris Olds, David B. Bunnell
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引用次数: 0

摘要

鲤科鱼类(矶鳕和白鱼)在经济、生态和文化上都是重要的鱼类,它们分布在整个北半球。在劳伦伦五大湖区,梭子鱼在 19 世纪和 20 世纪曾一度减少,因此管理者已将恢复它们的活动列为优先事项。恢复的一个重要手段是通过放养重新引入。然而,孵化育成的笛鲷会表现出与野生鱼类不同的形态,这可能会影响它们的适应性。遗憾的是,我们对这些差异的了解有限,因为之前的工作没有在形态分析中充分消除异速效应。我们使用适当的尺寸校正方法,比较了同一种群的野生鳕鱼和孵化饲养的鳕鱼的形态。与野生鱼类相比,孵化场饲养的鱼类头部较短、背鳍较短、身体较浅。此外,野生鱼类的某些特征也存在差异。我们的研究结果加深了我们对人工饲养如何影响匙吻鲟形态的理解,我们建议未来研究这些差异的原因以及它们是否会影响鱼类的适应性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Morphological differences between wild and hatchery-reared Bloater (Coregonus hoyi) from Lake Michigan, USA

Coregonines (ciscoes and whitefishes) are economically, ecologically, and culturally important fishes that are distributed throughout the Northern Hemisphere. In the Laurentian Great Lakes, coregonines declined throughout the 19th and 20th centuries, and managers have prioritized their restoration. A key restoration tool is reintroduction via stocking. However, hatchery-reared coregonines can display different morphologies than wild fish, which could affect their fitness. Unfortunately, our understanding of these differences is limited because previous work did not adequately remove allometric effects in morphological analyses. We compared morphologies between wild and hatchery-reared Bloater (Coregonus hoyi) from the same stock using appropriate size corrections. Hatchery-reared fish had shorter heads, shorter dorsal fins, and shallower bodies than wild fish. Moreover, some characters differed across wild fish collections. Our results improve our understanding of how artificial rearing can impact coregonine morphology, and we recommend future studies on what causes these differences and whether they impact fitness.

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来源期刊
Fisheries Management and Ecology
Fisheries Management and Ecology 农林科学-渔业
CiteScore
3.80
自引率
5.00%
发文量
77
审稿时长
12-24 weeks
期刊介绍: Fisheries Management and Ecology is a journal with an international perspective. It presents papers that cover all aspects of the management, ecology and conservation of inland, estuarine and coastal fisheries. The Journal aims to: foster an understanding of the maintenance, development and management of the conditions under which fish populations and communities thrive, and how they and their habitat can be conserved and enhanced; promote a thorough understanding of the dual nature of fisheries as valuable resources exploited for food, recreational and commercial purposes and as pivotal indicators of aquatic habitat quality and conservation status; help fisheries managers focus upon policy, management, operational, conservation and ecological issues; assist fisheries ecologists become more aware of the needs of managers for information, techniques, tools and concepts; integrate ecological studies with all aspects of management; ensure that the conservation of fisheries and their environments is a recurring theme in fisheries and aquatic management.
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