1. No evidence of kin bias in dispersion of young-of-the-year Atlantic salmon Salmo salar L. in a natural stream.
- Author
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Brodeur, N. N., Noël, M. V., Venter, O., Bernatchez, L., Dayanandan, S., and Grant, J. W. A.
- Subjects
ATLANTIC salmon ,MAXIMUM likelihood statistics ,FISHES ,SALMON - Abstract
Ninety-one young-of-the-year Atlantic salmon Salmo salar were captured using a non-invasive snorkelling technique in a 38 m section of Catamaran Brook, New Brunswick, Canada, to test whether related fish settle closer to one another than unrelated fish. A maximum likelihood estimate of parentage relationships assessed by genotyping eight microsatellite loci revealed five half-sibling families in the sample of fish. Related juvenile S. salar were not found closer to one another than unrelated fish in three analyses at two spatial scales: a comparison of the relatedness of focal fish to their nearest neighbour and to their four nearest neighbours, and a correlation of the pair-wise relatedness and distance matrices for all fish in the sample. The lack of a kin-biased dispersion pattern may be related to the lower density of fish or the scarcity of full-siblings at the study site compared to laboratory conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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