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- Title
Heritability of resistance to individual contaminants and to contaminant mixtures in the sheepshead minnow (Cyprinodon variegatus)
- Authors
Klerks, Paul L.; Moreau, Casey J.
- Abstract
Resistance heritability (the additive genetic variance out of the total phenotypic variance, signifying a population's potential to genetically adapt to detrimental levels of contamination) was quantified in the sheepshead minnow (Cyprinodon variegatus). Heritability was estimated for tolerance to individual contaminants (phenanthrene, zinc) and to contaminant mixtures (phenanthrene plus zinc, and a complex mixture with three metals and three polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons). Estimates were obtained from resemblances between relatives, both parent-offspring pairs, and families of sibs and half-sibs. Heritabilities determined from parent-offspring regressions averaged only 0.08 (scale, 0-1), whereas resemblance among full sibs yielded heritabilities averaging 0.85. The half-sib analysis yielded heritabilities of -0.01 (sire component) and 0.77 (dam component). This pattern in the magnitude of heritabilities indicates that heritabilities for the resistance of C. variegatus to these chemicals are low (with the high resemblances among sibs being due to common environmental and dominance genetic variation rather than additive genetic variation). The parent-offspring regressions provide evidence that heritabilities may be lower if more contaminants are involved. Our results mean, then, that C. variegatus in contaminated environments is not likely to become resistant to these contaminants very rapidly, and that resistance may develop even more slowly as more contaminants become involved.
- Subjects
BIOLOGY; GENETICS; SHEEPSHEAD minnow
- Publication
Environmental Toxicology & Chemistry, 2001, Vol 20, Issue 8, p1746
- ISSN
0730-7268
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1897/1551-5028(2001)020<1746:HORTIC>2.0.CO;2