The large yellow croaker Larimichthys crocea is one of the most important fish species in China. To estimate the re- productive success of breeders, three independent full-factorial crosses were created and the fins o...The large yellow croaker Larimichthys crocea is one of the most important fish species in China. To estimate the re- productive success of breeders, three independent full-factorial crosses were created and the fins of breeders and progenies were sampled for microsatellite analysis. Out of 959 offspring from three sets, 99.6% were assigned to their parents using 6-7 mi- crosatellite markers. In all crosses, some parent pairs produced a large number of offspring and some parent pairs did not produce any offspring. The contributions of male or female parents were unequal, ranging from 1.0-89.3% across the three sets. The loss of putative Ne was 69.6% in set 1, 31.2% in set 2 and 57.6% in set 3. These results suggest that the unequal contribution of parents is universal in artificial breeding ofL. crocea, especially in a small population, and this should be taken into account in hatcheries or when releasing animals for resource enhancement展开更多
基金Aeknowleflgements Thanks to Chen Qing-kai for rearing fish families. This study was supported by Special Fund for Agro-scientific Research in the Public Interest (200903029-4), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (30771663), Key Project of Fujian Provincial Department of Science & Technology (2010N0021), the Foundation for Innovation Research Team of Jimei University, China(2010A002) and the Open Foundation from Ocean Fishery Science and Technology in the Most Important Subjects of Zhejiang (20100203).
文摘The large yellow croaker Larimichthys crocea is one of the most important fish species in China. To estimate the re- productive success of breeders, three independent full-factorial crosses were created and the fins of breeders and progenies were sampled for microsatellite analysis. Out of 959 offspring from three sets, 99.6% were assigned to their parents using 6-7 mi- crosatellite markers. In all crosses, some parent pairs produced a large number of offspring and some parent pairs did not produce any offspring. The contributions of male or female parents were unequal, ranging from 1.0-89.3% across the three sets. The loss of putative Ne was 69.6% in set 1, 31.2% in set 2 and 57.6% in set 3. These results suggest that the unequal contribution of parents is universal in artificial breeding ofL. crocea, especially in a small population, and this should be taken into account in hatcheries or when releasing animals for resource enhancement