The endangered Rio Grande silvery minnow persists as a remnant population in a highly fragmented and regulated arid-land river system. The species is subject to dramatic fluctuations in density. Since 2003, the wild population has been supplemented by hatchery-reared fish. We report on a 12-year (1999 – 2010) monitoring study of genetic diversity and effective population size (Ne) of wild and hatchery stocks. Our goals were to evaluate how genetic metrics responded to changes in wild fish density and whether they corresponded to the number and levels of diversity of hatchery-reared repatriates. Genetic diversity and all measures of Ne in the wild population did not correlate with wild fish density until hatchery supplementation began in ear...
Many long-term genetic monitoring programs began before next-generation sequencing became widely ava...
Many declining and commercially important populations are supplemented with captive-born individuals...
Spatial and temporal fluctuations in productivity and abundance confound assessments of captive prop...
Human water use combined with a recent megadrought have reduced river and stream flow through the So...
Time-series analysis is used widely in ecology to study complex phenomena, and may have considerable...
Population introductions and reintroductions have become a common tool for conserving threatened spe...
Programs to rebuild imperiled wild fish populations often include hatchery-born fish derived from wi...
As with many endangered, long-lived iteroparous fishes, survival of razorback sucker depends on a ma...
Understanding the extent to which captivity generates maladaptation in wild species can inform speci...
Demographic data collected during long-term diversity monitoring and short-term ecological surveys w...
The effective population size (Ne) is notoriously difficult to accurately estimate in wild populatio...
Studies that span entire species ranges can provide insight into the relative roles of historical co...
Genetic variation is critical to the persistence of populations and their capacity to adapt to envir...
Many long-term genetic monitoring programs began before next-generation sequencing became widely ava...
Many declining and commercially important populations are supplemented with captive-born individuals...
Spatial and temporal fluctuations in productivity and abundance confound assessments of captive prop...
Human water use combined with a recent megadrought have reduced river and stream flow through the So...
Time-series analysis is used widely in ecology to study complex phenomena, and may have considerable...
Population introductions and reintroductions have become a common tool for conserving threatened spe...
Programs to rebuild imperiled wild fish populations often include hatchery-born fish derived from wi...
As with many endangered, long-lived iteroparous fishes, survival of razorback sucker depends on a ma...
Understanding the extent to which captivity generates maladaptation in wild species can inform speci...
Demographic data collected during long-term diversity monitoring and short-term ecological surveys w...
The effective population size (Ne) is notoriously difficult to accurately estimate in wild populatio...
Studies that span entire species ranges can provide insight into the relative roles of historical co...
Genetic variation is critical to the persistence of populations and their capacity to adapt to envir...
Many long-term genetic monitoring programs began before next-generation sequencing became widely ava...
Many declining and commercially important populations are supplemented with captive-born individuals...
Spatial and temporal fluctuations in productivity and abundance confound assessments of captive prop...