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NEWS FROM:
University of Idaho
Washington State University
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Dec. 15,
2000
CONTACTS: James Nagler, UI assistant professor of zoology,
(208) 885-4382, jamesn@uidaho.edu; Gary Thorgaard,
WSU School of Biological Sciences director, (509) 335-7438,
thorglab@wsu.edu, and Dennis Dauble, Pacific Northwest
National Laboratory technical resource manager, (509) 372-6313,
dd.dauble@pnl.gov; Bill Loftus, UI University Communications,
(208) 885-7694, bloftus@uidaho.edu, or Kathy Barnard,
UI University Communications, (208) 885-7725, kbarnard@uidaho.edu
Something's
Fishy with Columbia Chinook:
Females Carry Male's Genetic Signature
MOSCOW--Samples
in 1999 from fall chinook salmon in the Columbia River's Hanford
Reach show that four-fifths of the females spawning there
apparently began life as males.
The finding
could provide an important clue in sorting through the complex
reasons for the decline of Northwest salmon runs, although
the Hanford's wild fall chinook run is among the healthiest.
The researchers ruled out radiation as a possible cause of
the apparent sex reversal but suggested environmental contaminants
that mimic hormones or water temperature changes could be
the culprits.
The research
by University of Idaho and Washington State University scientists
in cooperation with the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
was published in Environmental Health Perspectives, a journal
of the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences.
James
J. Nagler, UI assistant professor of zoology who led the study,
said the results of the genetic testing on the natural-spawning
chinook came as a surprise.
"We have
found that a majority of the female chinook salmon sampled
carry a genetic marker that is found only in male salmon.
The best explanation for these results is that these females
have been 'sex reversed' and are in fact male," Nagler said.
"This is not unheard of as salmon can be sex reversed experimentally
under laboratory conditions. What is surprising is that this
is the first report of this from a wild population of fish."
Gary Thorgaard,
WSU's School of Biological Sciences director and a co-author
of the paper, says that experiments in his laboratory and
others have shown it is possible to reverse the sex of trout
embryos through the use of hormones. A study in Canada showed
changing temperature could alter the sex of young sockeye
salmon.
Other
authors include Jerry Bouma, UI graduate student, and Dennis
Dauble, a salmon biologist at the Pacific Northwest National
Laboratory operated by Battelle in Richland. Dauble, PNNL
natural resources manager, has conducted research on salmon
spawning and habitat in the Hanford Reach for 27 years.
Nagler
gathered the original Hanford Reach samples in fall 1999 and
took additional samples in November 2000. He has expanded
the research to other rivers, including the Yakima, a major
Columbia tributary. Pesticides and other chemicals that could
mimic estrogen and disrupt the normal development of salmon
are present in the Columbia's water, Nagler said, but at very
low concentrations, far below those used in laboratory experiments.
Records
also show daily changes in the Columbia's water temperature
as water flows fluctuate to generate hydroelectricity.
"These
results may explain in part the difficulties some salmon have
had reproducing in the Columbia River Basin. The cause of
the apparent sex-reversal in these chinook salmon is presently
unknown," Nagler added.
DNA tests
of female chinook raised in the adjacent Priest Rapids Fish
Hatchery showed no such changes. The close genetic relationship
of those Priest Rapids fish to the Hanford Reach chinook suggested
that the river environment was responsible for the unusual
results in the Hanford females. Tests of female spring chinook
from Dworshak National Fish Hatchery along Idaho's Clearwater
River at Ahsahka likewise showed no evidence of the male-linked
genetic marker.
The genetically
altered females, instead of carrying the normal two X chromosomes,
appear to carry one X and one Y chromosome, the normal genetic
signature of the male. The altered females of the Hanford
Reach produced eggs, spawned and then died as is normal in
the Pacific salmon's life cycle. DNA from small pieces of
fin showed the genetic markers that indicate their male genotype.
The mating of a genetically altered female and a normal male
could then produce males with two Y chromosomes, and such
males could then only produce male offspring, thus imbalancing
the sex ratio of spawners.
The Hanford
Reach remains the most important natural spawning area for
fall chinook salmon in the main-stem Columbia River, and this
wild chinook run is the largest upstream from dams in the
Columbia Basin. The reach is the last free-flowing stretch
of the Columbia upstream from Bonneville Dam.
The research
is the result of just one season's testing, Nagler noted.
Still, the preliminary findings raise provocative questions
about other factors that may be responsible for the decline
of the Northwest's famed salmon runs.
"The current
study by the research team at WSU and UI published in Environmental
Health Perspectives by the NIH is one of the first insights
that basic problems in fish reproduction and genetics could
be a significant factor affecting the decline of salmon populations,"
said Michael Skinner, director of the WSU-UI Center for Reproductive
Biology. Nagler and Thorgaard are affiliated with the center.
"Understanding
these basic biological issues helps define solutions to the
endangered salmon recovery that are scientifically based,"
added Skinner. He said that 30-some projects at UI and WSU
focus on salmon restoration issues.
-30-
Editors:
James Nagler's journal article is online at http://ehis.niehs.nih.gov/docs/admin/newest.html.
Photos or video clips are available online at www.uidaho.edu/salmon
or by contacting bloftus@uidaho.edu
BL-12/15/00-BIOL
Chinook
Salmon Photo Courtesy of Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.
All Other Materials Copyright © 2000, University of Idaho.
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