Search
Now showing items 1-4 of 4
Consequences of farmed-wild hybridization across divergent wild populations and multiple traits in salmon
(2010-06)
Theory predicts that hybrid fitness should decrease as population divergence increases. This
suggests that the effects of human-induced hybridization might be adequately predicted from the
known divergence among parental ...
Hybridization effects on phenotypic plasticity: experimental compensatory growth in farmed-wild Atlantic salmon
(2011-05)
Compensatory growth (CG) is a means by which organisms can increase their growth rate above
their routine growth rate after a period of environmentally induced growth depression. Despite a
focus on the implications of ...
Relative risks of inbreeding and outbreeding depression in the wild in endangered salmon
(2011-09)
Conservation biologists routinely face the dilemma of keeping small, fragmented populations
isolated, wherein inbreeding depression may ensue, or mixing such populations, which may exacerbate
population declines via ...
Concurrent habitat and life history influences on effective/census population size ratios in stream-dwelling trout
(2012-03)
Lower effective sizes (Ne) than census sizes (N) are routinely documented in natural
populations, but knowledge of how multiple factors interact to lower N-e/N ratios is often limited.
We show how combined habitat and ...