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Woody, C. A., J. Olsen, J. Reynolds, and P. Bentzen.
2000. Temporal variation in phenotypic and genotypic traits in two
sockeye salmon populations, Tustumena Lake, Alaska. Transactions of the
American Fisheries Society 129:1031-1043
Abstract:
Sockeye salmon Oncorhynchus nerka in two tributary streams
(about 20 km apart) of the same lake were compared for temporal variation
in phenotypic (length, depth adjusted for length) and genotypic (six
microsatellite loci) traits. Peak run time (July 16 versus 11
August) and run duration (43 versus 26 days) differed between
streams. Populations were sampled twice, including an overlapping
point in time. Divergence at microsatellite loci followed a temporal
cline: population sample groups collected at the same time were not
different (Fst = 0), whereas those most separated in time were
different (Fst = 0.011, P = 0.001). Although
contemporaneous sample groups did not differ significantly in
microsatellite genotypes (Fst = 0), phenotypic traits did
differ significantly (MANOVA, P < 0.001). Fish from the larger
stream were larger; fish from the smaller stream were smaller, suggesting
differential fitness related to size. Results indicate run time
differences among and within sockeye salmon populations may strongly
influence levels of gene flow.

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