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Effective number of breeders provides a link between interannual variation in stream flow and individual reproductive contribution in a stream salmonid
Authors:Andrew R Whiteley  Jason A Coombs  Matthew Cembrola  Matthew J O'Donnell  Mark Hudy  Keith H Nislow  Benjamin H Letcher
Institution:1. Department of Environmental Conservation, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA, USA;2. U.S. Forest Service, Northern Research Station, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA, USA;3. U.S. Geological Survey, Leetown Science Center, S.O. Conte Anadromous Fish Research Center, Turners Falls, MA, USA;4. U.S. Geological Survey, Ecosystems, Reston, VA, USA
Abstract:The effective number of breeders that give rise to a cohort (Nb) is a promising metric for genetic monitoring of species with overlapping generations; however, more work is needed to understand factors that contribute to variation in this measure in natural populations. We tested hypotheses related to interannual variation in Nb in two long‐term studies of brook trout populations. We found no supporting evidence for our initial hypothesis that urn:x-wiley:09621083:media:mec13273:mec13273-math-0007 reflects urn:x-wiley:09621083:media:mec13273:mec13273-math-0008 (defined as the number of adults in a population at the time of reproduction). urn:x-wiley:09621083:media:mec13273:mec13273-math-0009 was stable relative to urn:x-wiley:09621083:media:mec13273:mec13273-math-0010 and did not follow trends in abundance (one stream negative, the other positive). We used stream flow estimates to test the alternative hypothesis that environmental factors constrain Nb. We observed an intermediate optimum autumn stream flow for both urn:x-wiley:09621083:media:mec13273:mec13273-math-0011 (R2 = 0.73, = 0.02) and full‐sibling family evenness (R2 = 0.77, = 0.01) in one population and a negative correlation between autumn stream flow and full‐sib family evenness in the other population (= ?0.95, = 0.02). Evidence for greater reproductive skew at the lowest and highest autumn flow was consistent with suboptimal conditions at flow extremes. A series of additional tests provided no supporting evidence for a related hypothesis that density‐dependent reproductive success was responsible for the lack of relationship between Nb and NC (so‐called genetic compensation). This work provides evidence that Nb is a useful metric of population‐specific individual reproductive contribution for genetic monitoring across populations and the link we provide between stream flow and Nb could be used to help predict population resilience to environmental change.
Keywords:effective number of breeders  genetic monitoring  linkage disequilibrium  stream fishes  stream flow
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