Litcius/Paper detail

Iteroparity and its contribution to life-history variation in Atlantic salmon

Lo Persson, Astrid Raunsgård, Eva B. Thorstad, Gunnel Marie Østborg, Kurt Urdal, Harald Sægrov, Ola Ugedal, Kjetil Hindar, Sten Karlsson, Peder Fiske, Geir H. Bolstad

2022Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Evolution of iteroparity is shaped by the trade-off between current and future reproduction. We studied variation in iteroparity among 205 050 individual Atlantic salmon caught in 179 rivers spanning 14° of latitude. The proportion of repeat spawners (iteroparous individuals) averaged 3.8% and ranged from 0% to 26% across rivers. Females were more often repeat spawners than males and had lower cost of reproduction in terms of lost body mass between spawning events. Proportion of repeat spawners for a given sea age at maturity, and the ratio of alternate to consecutive repeat spawners, increased with increasing population mean sea age at maturity. By combining smolt age, sea age at maturity, and age at additional spawning events, we identified 141 unique life-history types, and repeat spawners contributed 75% of that variation. Our results show that repeat spawners are important for life-history variation and suggest that the association between mean sea age and the frequency of repeat spawning is adaptive rather than a pleiotropic side effect arising from selection on sea age.

Topics & Concepts

Semelparity and iteroparityBiologyReproductionLife history theoryLife historyPopulationEcologySexual maturityZoologyDemographySociologyFish Ecology and Management StudiesMarine and fisheries researchGenetic diversity and population structure