Demographic collapse of Italian trout populations, owing to the last century freshwater quantitative and qualitative impoverishment, was contrasted by massive stocking of exotic congenerics to sustain angling pressure. After the restoration - or at least regulation - of sustainable water use and management, the envisaged solution to halt population depletion turned out to be the new problem: all native Italian trout populations resulted to be heavily impacted by Atlantic brown trout through hybridisation and genetic introgression. In order to contrast the native trout decline, dozens of projects based on captive breeding programs were then started. Despite a formal general agreement that supportive or supplemental breeding should base on strong genetic data, in order to recover and conserve micro-scale diversity and evolutionary significant units, most breeding programs - sustained by from the smallest local angling association up to the European Community - still exclusively depend on i) morphological selection of breeders, ii) maintenance of captive semi-domesticated breeding stocks, and/or iii) stocking of selected conspecific from different water systems. The outcome of such management actions is, at times, favouring a phenotypic shift of hybrids to the expected or desired morphology patterns, accelerating introgression by fostering the reproduction of hybrids, promoting artificial versus natural selection in non-natural breeding conditions, depleting local biodiversity by mixing and homogenising different management units. We here report a multi-year case study on a drainage-scale management plan of marble trout (Salmo marmoratus) in the North – East of Italy. We present the outcomes of an extensive genetic screening of breeding stocks derived from different generations of phenotype selection and maintained for supportive breeding, demonstrating all the main limitations of such a scheme; we introduce the shift to supplemental breeding, based on strict genetic evaluation of wild spawners; and we finally show the first evaluation of the qualitative and quantitative effects of this change of pace. We thus try to exemplify the way to avoid that the foreseen solution to the problem, i.e. conservation projects, will once more translate to the next and final sprint in the race to native trout genomic extinction.

Gandolfi, A.; Eisendle, D.; Wieser, J.; Girardi, M.; Casari, S.; Crestanello, B.; Meraner, A. (2019). Do it right or don't do it at all! Genetic screening of S. marmoratus exemplifies the need to revise many or most salmonid conservation and restocking programmes. In: Advances in the Population Ecology of Stream Salmonids V, Granada, Spain, 20-24 May 2019: 42. url: http://www.salmonidsymposium.es/ handle: http://hdl.handle.net/10449/54388

Do it right or don't do it at all! Genetic screening of S. marmoratus exemplifies the need to revise many or most salmonid conservation and restocking programmes

Gandolfi, A.
Primo
;
Girardi, M.;Casari, Stefano;Crestanello, B.;
2019-01-01

Abstract

Demographic collapse of Italian trout populations, owing to the last century freshwater quantitative and qualitative impoverishment, was contrasted by massive stocking of exotic congenerics to sustain angling pressure. After the restoration - or at least regulation - of sustainable water use and management, the envisaged solution to halt population depletion turned out to be the new problem: all native Italian trout populations resulted to be heavily impacted by Atlantic brown trout through hybridisation and genetic introgression. In order to contrast the native trout decline, dozens of projects based on captive breeding programs were then started. Despite a formal general agreement that supportive or supplemental breeding should base on strong genetic data, in order to recover and conserve micro-scale diversity and evolutionary significant units, most breeding programs - sustained by from the smallest local angling association up to the European Community - still exclusively depend on i) morphological selection of breeders, ii) maintenance of captive semi-domesticated breeding stocks, and/or iii) stocking of selected conspecific from different water systems. The outcome of such management actions is, at times, favouring a phenotypic shift of hybrids to the expected or desired morphology patterns, accelerating introgression by fostering the reproduction of hybrids, promoting artificial versus natural selection in non-natural breeding conditions, depleting local biodiversity by mixing and homogenising different management units. We here report a multi-year case study on a drainage-scale management plan of marble trout (Salmo marmoratus) in the North – East of Italy. We present the outcomes of an extensive genetic screening of breeding stocks derived from different generations of phenotype selection and maintained for supportive breeding, demonstrating all the main limitations of such a scheme; we introduce the shift to supplemental breeding, based on strict genetic evaluation of wild spawners; and we finally show the first evaluation of the qualitative and quantitative effects of this change of pace. We thus try to exemplify the way to avoid that the foreseen solution to the problem, i.e. conservation projects, will once more translate to the next and final sprint in the race to native trout genomic extinction.
Salmo marmoratus
Conservation genetics
2019
Gandolfi, A.; Eisendle, D.; Wieser, J.; Girardi, M.; Casari, S.; Crestanello, B.; Meraner, A. (2019). Do it right or don't do it at all! Genetic screening of S. marmoratus exemplifies the need to revise many or most salmonid conservation and restocking programmes. In: Advances in the Population Ecology of Stream Salmonids V, Granada, Spain, 20-24 May 2019: 42. url: http://www.salmonidsymposium.es/ handle: http://hdl.handle.net/10449/54388
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