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Extensive hybridization following a large escape of domesticated Atlantic salmon in the Northwest Atlantic

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Domestication is rife with episodes of interbreeding between cultured and wild populations, potentially challenging adaptive variation in the wild. In Atlantic salmon, Salmo salar, the number of domesticated individuals far… Click to show full abstract

Domestication is rife with episodes of interbreeding between cultured and wild populations, potentially challenging adaptive variation in the wild. In Atlantic salmon, Salmo salar, the number of domesticated individuals far exceeds wild individuals, and escape events occur regularly, yet evidence of the magnitude and geographic scale of interbreeding resulting from individual escape events is lacking. We screened juvenile Atlantic salmon using 95 single nucleotide polymorphisms following a single, large aquaculture escape in the Northwest Atlantic and report the landscape-scale detection of hybrid and feral salmon (27.1%, 17/18 rivers). Hybrids were reproductively viable, and observed at higher frequency in smaller wild populations. Repeated annual sampling of this cohort revealed decreases in the presence of hybrid and feral offspring over time. These results link previous observations of escaped salmon in rivers with reports of population genetic change, and demonstrate the potential negative consequences of escapes from net-pen aquaculture on wild populations.Brendan Wringe et al. find evidence of extensive hybridization between wild and domesticated salmon following a large escape event in the Northwest Atlantic in 2013. Genetic screening of juvenile salmon shows that > 27% of fish in 17 of 18 rivers examined are hybrids or feral, demonstrating a significant impact of escaped individuals on local populations.

Keywords: escape; salmon; northwest atlantic; extensive hybridization; following large; atlantic salmon

Journal Title: Communications Biology
Year Published: 2018

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