2016
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.2088
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Genetic correlations and little genetic variance for reaction norms may limit potential for adaptation to pollution by ionic and nanoparticulate silver in a whitefish (Salmonidae)

Abstract: For natural populations to adapt to anthropogenic threats, heritable variation must persist in tolerance traits. Silver nanoparticles, the most widely used engineered nanoparticles, are expected to increase in concentrations in freshwaters. Little is known about how these particles affect wild populations, and whether genetic variation persists in tolerance to permit rapid evolutionary responses. We sampled wild adult whitefish and crossed them in vitro full factorially. In total, 2896 singly raised embryos of… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(13 citation statements)
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References 73 publications
(151 reference statements)
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“…Such genetic effects can be interpreted as the overall genetic quality of the embryo; for example, its immune competence or its genetic load (Neff & Pitcher, ). The fitness‐associated traits include, for example, tolerance to uncontrolled epidemics or nonspecified stressors (e.g., Evans, Neff, & Heath, ; Pitcher & Neff, ; Wedekind, Müller, & Spicher, ), specific bacterial infections (Clark et al., ; von Siebenthal, Jacob, & Wedekind, ), chemical pollution (Brazzola, Chèvre, & Wedekind, ), or pollution by nanoparticles (Clark, Pompini, Uppal, & Wedekind, ). The present study adds organic pollution to this list.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such genetic effects can be interpreted as the overall genetic quality of the embryo; for example, its immune competence or its genetic load (Neff & Pitcher, ). The fitness‐associated traits include, for example, tolerance to uncontrolled epidemics or nonspecified stressors (e.g., Evans, Neff, & Heath, ; Pitcher & Neff, ; Wedekind, Müller, & Spicher, ), specific bacterial infections (Clark et al., ; von Siebenthal, Jacob, & Wedekind, ), chemical pollution (Brazzola, Chèvre, & Wedekind, ), or pollution by nanoparticles (Clark, Pompini, Uppal, & Wedekind, ). The present study adds organic pollution to this list.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…, ), size at hatching (Clark et al . , ) and immune gene expression (Clark et al . ; Wilkins et al .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…At later developmental stages, the importance of zygotic gene expression becomes crucial for the interaction with associated bacteria (Finn 2007;Clark et al 2013aClark et al , 2014. Host genetic effects could be revealed for important embryo life-history traits such as mortality in Oncorhynchus tshawytscha (Aykanat et al 2012), Salmo trutta (Jacob et al 2010;Clark et al 2013b) or Coregonus palaea (von Siebenthal et al 2009;Clark & Wedekind 2011;Clark et al 2014) and time until hatching (Clark et al 2013a(Clark et al , 2014, size at hatching (Clark et al 2014(Clark et al , 2016 and immune gene expression (Clark et al 2013a;Wilkins et al 2015c) in C. palaea. The interplay of fish embryos with their associated bacteria also depends on environmental factors, which, for example, can turn opportunistic bacteria into virulent fish pathogens (Jacob et al 2010;Wedekind et al 2010).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, such an error is unlikely here because (i) our analysis is based on a large sample size (1,555 singly-reared embryos) and 40 sib groups, (ii) our sample revealed overall additive genetic variance [58,59], pathogens [60] or even waterborne cues linked to infection [61].…”
Section: Such a Reduction In Growth Was Predicted From Recent Analysementioning
confidence: 95%