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      Infectious disease, shifting climates, and opportunistic predators: cumulative factors potentially impacting wild salmon declines.

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          Abstract

          Emerging diseases are impacting animals under high-density culture, yet few studies assess their importance to wild populations. Microparasites selected for enhanced virulence in culture settings should be less successful maintaining infectivity in wild populations, as once the host dies, there are limited opportunities to infect new individuals. Instead, moderately virulent microparasites persisting for long periods across multiple environments are of greatest concern. Evolved resistance to endemic microparasites may reduce susceptibilities, but as barriers to microparasite distributions are weakened, and environments become more stressful, unexposed populations may be impacted and pathogenicity enhanced. We provide an overview of the evolutionary and ecological impacts of infectious diseases in wild salmon and suggest ways in which modern technologies can elucidate the microparasites of greatest potential import. We present four case studies that resolve microparasite impacts on adult salmon migration success, impact of river warming on microparasite replication, and infection status on susceptibility to predation. Future health of wild salmon must be considered in a holistic context that includes the cumulative or synergistic impacts of multiple stressors. These approaches will identify populations at greatest risk, critically needed to manage and potentially ameliorate the shifts in current or future trajectories of wild populations.

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          Most cited references327

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          An Introduction to the Bootstrap

          Statistics is a subject of many uses and surprisingly few effective practitioners. The traditional road to statistical knowledge is blocked, for most, by a formidable wall of mathematics. The approach in An Introduction to the Bootstrap avoids that wall. It arms scientists and engineers, as well as statisticians, with the computational techniques they need to analyze and understand complicated data sets.
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            Climate change affects marine fishes through the oxygen limitation of thermal tolerance.

            A cause-and-effect understanding of climate influences on ecosystems requires evaluation of thermal limits of member species and of their ability to cope with changing temperatures. Laboratory data available for marine fish and invertebrates from various climatic regions led to the hypothesis that, as a unifying principle, a mismatch between the demand for oxygen and the capacity of oxygen supply to tissues is the first mechanism to restrict whole-animal tolerance to thermal extremes. We show in the eelpout, Zoarces viviparus, a bioindicator fish species for environmental monitoring from North and Baltic Seas (Helcom), that thermally limited oxygen delivery closely matches environmental temperatures beyond which growth performance and abundance decrease. Decrements in aerobic performance in warming seas will thus be the first process to cause extinction or relocation to cooler waters.
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              R: a language and environment for statistic computing

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Evol Appl
                Evolutionary applications
                Wiley
                1752-4571
                1752-4571
                Aug 2014
                : 7
                : 7
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Pacific Biological Station, Fisheries and Oceans Canada Nanaimo, BC, Canada ; Forest and Conservation Sciences, University of British Columbia Vancouver, BC, Canada.
                [2 ] Biology Department, University of Victoria Victoria, BC, Canada.
                [3 ] Pacific Biological Station, Fisheries and Oceans Canada Nanaimo, BC, Canada.
                [4 ] Pacific Biological Station, Fisheries and Oceans Canada Nanaimo, BC, Canada ; Biology Department, University of Victoria Victoria, BC, Canada.
                [5 ] Fish Ecology and Conservation Physiology Laboratory, Department of Biology, Carleton Univerisy Ottawa, ON, Canada.
                [6 ] Environment Canada, Wildlife Research Division Delta, BC, Canada.
                [7 ] Fisheries and Oceans Canada, School of Resource and Environmental Management, Simon Fraser University, Science Branch Burnaby, BC, Canada.
                [8 ] Forest and Conservation Sciences, University of British Columbia Vancouver, BC, Canada.
                Article
                10.1111/eva.12164
                4227861
                25469162
                8bac249e-3179-412c-b03b-41a62e0cfe8c
                History

                climate,coevolution,cumulative impacts,ecological impacts,infectious disease,microparasite,predation,wild salmon

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