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Scottish Marine and Freshwater Science Reports

Formal report series, containing results of research and monitoring carried out by Marine Scotland Science

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A national assessment of the influence of farmed salmon escapes on the genetic integrity of wild Scottish Atlantic salmon populations

Scottish Marine and Freshwater Science Vol 12 No 12

Interbreeding between escaped farmed Atlantic salmon and wild indigenous salmon (hybridisation) introduces genetic material from farmed stocks into wild populations (introgression) with resulting disruption of the adaptive genetic composition of individuals and populations. This can impact their fitness resulting in a significant negative pressure on the viability of wild populations. Recent advances in analytical and statistical techniques are able to differentiate between farmed salmon of Norwegian origin, native wild Scottish salmon and progeny resulting from interbreeding. By sampling a number of juvenile salmon from a particular location it also possible to estimate the proportion of foreign genetic material present in wild Scottish salmon populations and to identify whether this is due to recent or historical events. Monitoring the proportions of wild fish affected by hybridisation is routinely carried out in other countries, and can feed into management decision making. This is the first time a survey to examine the genetic status of populations has been conducted across the geographical extent of Scotland.

Data and maps available to view and download on the NEPS Shiny app.

doi: 
10.7489/12386-1
Citation: 
J Gilbey, J Sampayo, E Cauwelier, I Malcolm, K Millidine, F Jackson & D J Morris. 2021. A national assessment of the influence of farmed salmon escapes on the genetic integrity of wild Scottish Atlantic salmon populations. Scottish Marine and Freshwater Science Vol 12 No 12, 70pp. DOI: 10.7489/12386-1
FieldValue
Publisher
Modified
2021-10-08
Release Date
2021-09-16
Identifier
0ce776cd-8c77-4067-8db5-b50b3f2b01bb
Spatial / Geographical Coverage Location
Scotland
Temporal Coverage
2018-01-01 to 2019-12-31
License
UK Open Government Licence (OGL)
Data Dictionary

A bespoke panel of genetic markers, developed specifically to detect genetic changes in Scottish wild salmon, was used to screen tissue samples collected from juvenile fish from 252 sites across Scotland between 2018 and 2019 (n = 2,964 fish). These fish were sampled as part of the National Electrofishing Programme for Scotland (NEPS), and were further supplemented by targeted sampling of sites in the immediate vicinity of freshwater salmon smolt rearing sites. Taken together these data represent the first national scale examination of the genetic integrity of wild juvenile Atlantic salmon in Scotland in relation to interbreeding with Norwegian farm origin salmon strains.

Contact Name
Marine Scotland
Contact Email
Public Access Level
Public