Abstract

AbstractHatchery enhancement has been reported to result in an increase in egg size in coho salmon Oncorhynchus kisutch and a decline in egg size in Chinook salmon O. tshawytscha. Egg size may be directly influenced by selection, a larger egg size evolving as a consequence of hatchery incubation. Alternatively, a smaller egg size could evolve as a correlated response to fecundity selection, and a unidirectional change in egg size over time may reflect selection and an underlying genetic change in the population. To address this question, temporal trends in egg size were investigated for two hatchery‐enhanced populations of Chinook salmon from Vancouver Island, British Columbia. After the effect of female length variation was removed by standardizing egg sizes to a female of common length (the overall mean for each population), there was no temporal trend in egg size from the 1970s to 2008 for any of the hatchery‐enhanced populations evaluated. These results do not support a previous report of genetically based declines in egg size in hatchery‐enhanced Chinook salmon populations from this region.

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