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      Y-chromosome haplotypes are associated with variation in size and age at maturity in male Chinook salmon

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          ABSTRACT

          Variation in size and age at maturity is an important component of life history that is influenced both by environmental and genetic factors. In salmonids, large size confers a direct reproductive advantage through increased fecundity and egg quality in females, while larger males gain a reproductive advantage by monopolizing access to females. In addition, variation in size and age at maturity in males can be associated with different reproductive strategies; younger smaller males may gain reproductive success by sneaking in among mating pairs. In both sexes there is a trade-off between older age and increased reproductive success and increased risk of mortality by delaying reproduction. We identified four Y-chromosome haplogroups that showed regional and population-specific variation in frequency using RADseq data for 21 populations of Alaska Chinook salmon. We then characterized the range-wide distribution of these haplogroups using GT-seq assays. These haplogroups exhibited associations with size at maturity in multiple populations suggesting that the lack of recombination between X and Y-chromosomes has allowed Y-chromosome haplogroups to capture different alleles that influence size at maturity. Ultimately, conservation of life history diversity in Chinook salmon may require conservation of Y-chromosome haplotype diversity.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          bioRxiv
          July 03 2019
          Article
          10.1101/691063
          dab6b31c-9d02-41d0-9f41-bd56709b0706
          © 2019
          History

          Evolutionary Biology,Forensic science
          Evolutionary Biology, Forensic science

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