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Body condition ( W r ) and reproductive potential of bighead and silver carp hybrids: Postzygotic selection in the Mississippi River Basin
Author(s) -
Lamer James T.,
Ruebush Blake C.,
McClelland Michael A.,
Epifanio John M.,
Sass Greg G.
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
ecology and evolution
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.17
H-Index - 63
ISSN - 2045-7758
DOI - 10.1002/ece3.5423
Subject(s) - biology , bighead carp , hybrid , reproductive isolation , gonadosomatic index , zoology , backcrossing , silver carp , hypophthalmichthys , introgression , fecundity , botany , population , genetics , fishery , sociology , fish <actinopterygii> , gene , demography
Invasive bighead ( Hypophthalmichthys nobilis ) and silver carp ( H. molitrix ) are reproductively isolated in their native range, but form a bimodal, multigenerational hybrid swarm within the Mississippi River Basin (MRB). Despite observed F 1 hybrid superiority in experimental settings, effects of postzygotic selection on bighead and silver carp hybrids have not been tested in a natural system. Individual parent and hybrid genotypes were resolved at 57 species‐specific loci and used to evaluate postzygotic selection for body condition ( W r ) and female reproductive potential (presence of spawning stage gonads and gonadosomatic index [GSI]) in the MRB during 2009–2011. Body condition in the Marseilles Reach, Illinois River declined with a decrease in species‐specific allele frequency from 1.0 to 0.4 for each species and early generation hybrids (F 1 , F 2 , and first‐generation backcross) had lower mean W r than late generation hybrids (2nd+ generation backcrosses) and parentals. Proportions of stage IV and stage V (spawning stage) female gonads differed between bighead and silver carp, but not among parentals and their early and late generation hybrids within the MRB. Mean GSI values did not differ between parentals and hybrids. Because reproductive potential did not differ between hybrids and parentals, our results suggest that early generation hybrids occur in low frequency either as a factor of poor condition ( W r ) and postreproductive survival, infrequent reproductive encounters by parental bighead and silver carp, or selection pressures acting on juvenile or immature life stages. Our results suggest that a combination of genetic and environmental factors may contribute to the postzygotic success of bighead and silver carp hybrids in the Mississippi River Basin.

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