Population effects of growth hormone transgenic coho salmon depend on food availability and genotype by environment interactions

被引:92
作者
Devlin, RH [1 ]
D'Andrade, M [1 ]
Uh, M [1 ]
Biagi, CA [1 ]
机构
[1] Fisheries & Oceans Canada, W Vancouver, BC V7V 1N6, Canada
关键词
D O I
10.1073/pnas.0400023101
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Environmental risk assessment of genetically modified organisms requires determination of their fitness and invasiveness relative to conspecifics and other ecosystem members. Cultured growth hormone transgenic coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) have enhanced feeding capacity and growth, which can result in large enhancements in body size (>7-fold) relative to nontransgenic salmon, but in nature, the ability to compete for available food is a key factor determining survival fitness and invasiveness of a genotype. When transgenic and nontransgenic salmon were co-habitated and competed for different levels of food, transgenic salmon consistently outgrew nontransgenic fish and could affect the growth of nontransgenic cohorts except when food availability was high. When food abundance was low, dominant individuals emerged, invariably transgenic, that directed strong agonistic and cannibalistic behavior to cohorts and dominated the acquisition of limited food resources. When food availability was low, all groups containing transgenic salmon experienced population crashes or complete extinctions, whereas groups containing only nontransgenic salmon had good (72.0 +/- 4.3% SE) survival, and their population biomass continued to increase. Thus, effects of growth hormone transgenic salmon on experimental populations were primarily mediated by an interaction between food availability and population structure. These data, while indicative of forces which may act on natural populations, also underscore the importance of genotype by environment interactions in influencing risk assessment data for genetically modified organisms and suggest that,for species such as salmon which are derived from large complex ecosystems, considerable caution is warranted in applying data from individual studies.
引用
收藏
页码:9303 / 9308
页数:6
相关论文
共 38 条
[1]   The foraging and antipredator behaviour of growth-enhanced transgenic Atlantic salmon [J].
Abrahams, MV ;
Sutterlin, A .
ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR, 1999, 58 :933-942
[2]   Adaptive intrinsic growth rates: An integration across taxa [J].
Arendt, JD .
QUARTERLY REVIEW OF BIOLOGY, 1997, 72 (02) :149-177
[3]   A critical size and period hypothesis to explain natural regulation of salmon abundance and the linkage to climate and climate change [J].
Beamish, RJ ;
Mahnken, C .
PROGRESS IN OCEANOGRAPHY, 2001, 49 (1-4) :423-437
[4]   Effects of hatchery and wild ancestry and rearing environments on the development of agonistic behavior in steelhead trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) fry [J].
Berejikian, BA ;
Mathews, SB ;
Quinn, TP .
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FISHERIES AND AQUATIC SCIENCES, 1996, 53 (09) :2004-2014
[5]   AGGRESSIVE BEHAVIOR IN JUVENILE COHO SALMON AS A CAUSE OF EMIGRATION [J].
CHAPMAN, DW .
JOURNAL OF THE FISHERIES RESEARCH BOARD OF CANADA, 1962, 19 (06) :1047-1080
[6]   Metabolic rate of pre-smelt growth-enhanced transgenic Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) [J].
Cook, JT ;
McNiven, MA ;
Sutterlin, AM .
AQUACULTURE, 2000, 188 (1-2) :33-45
[7]   Effect of food deprivation on oxygen consumption and body composition of growth-enhanced transgenic Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) [J].
Cook, JT ;
Sutterlin, AM ;
McNiven, MA .
AQUACULTURE, 2000, 188 (1-2) :47-63
[8]  
Devlin R. H., 1992, TRANSGENIC FISH, P229, DOI DOI 10.1142/1678
[9]   Transmission and phenotypic effects of an antifreeze GH gene construct in coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) [J].
Devlin, RH ;
Yesaki, TY ;
Donaldson, EM ;
Hew, CL .
AQUACULTURE, 1995, 137 (1-4) :161-169
[10]   Increased ability to compete for food by growth hormone-transgenic coho salmon Oncorhynchus kisutch (Walbaum) [J].
Devlin, RH ;
Johnsson, JI ;
Smailus, DE ;
Biagi, CA ;
Jönsson, E ;
Björnsson, BT .
AQUACULTURE RESEARCH, 1999, 30 (07) :479-482