Authors
C Garcia de Leaniz, IA Fleming, S Einum, E Verspoor, WC Jordan, S Consuegra, N Aubin‐Horth, D Lajus, BH Letcher, AF Youngson, JH Webb, LA Vøllestad, B Villanueva, A Ferguson, TP Quinn
Publication date
2007/5
Source
Biological reviews
Volume
82
Issue
2
Pages
173-211
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Inc
Description
Here we critically review the scale and extent of adaptive genetic variation in Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.), an important model system in evolutionary and conservation biology that provides fundamental insights into population persistence, adaptive response and the effects of anthropogenic change. We consider the process of adaptation as the end product of natural selection, one that can best be viewed as the degree of matching between phenotype and environment. We recognise three potential sources of adaptive variation: heritable variation in phenotypic traits related to fitness, variation at the molecular level in genes influenced by selection, and variation in the way genes interact with the environment to produce phenotypes of varying plasticity. Of all phenotypic traits examined, variation in body size (or in correlated characters such as growth rates, age of seaward migration or age at sexual maturity …
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