• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 155
  • 149
  • 35
  • 29
  • 15
  • 5
  • 5
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 2
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 464
  • 130
  • 100
  • 86
  • 84
  • 79
  • 78
  • 73
  • 66
  • 52
  • 47
  • 44
  • 44
  • 41
  • 40
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
261

The effect of sex ratio on male reproductive success in painted turtles, Chrysemys picta

Hughes, Elinor Jane 25 August 2011 (has links)
Sex ratio theory suggests that the strength of intersexual selection will increase as a population more male-biased; reflecting increased selectivity in mate choice. Populations of pond turtle have varying adult sex ratios, in painted turtles (Chrysemys picta), reported sex ratios range from female biased (1:3) to male biased (3:1). I investigated the effect of sex ratio on male reproductive success (quantified as “fertilization success”) in painted turtles. I examined the mating system of painted turtles in a female-biased population using microsatellite paternity analysis, relating variation in male fertilization success to male phenotype and offspring survival, employed ex situ behavioural observation to clarify the mechanism behind the variation in male fertilization success and used agent-based modeling to simulate the effects of changing sex ratio, population density and proportions of male phenotype on male fertilization success. Small males contributed sperm to a greater number of clutches than did larger males, but were not more likely to reproduce in a season than larger males. There was no offspring fitness advantage related to male body size and no relationship between male claw length and fertilization success. Large male painted turtles courted at a higher frequency than small males. I found no relationship between male courtship behavior and claw length. Females showed no preference for males of any phenotype. Agent-based simulations were based on the distribution of best fit from the observed data; an amalgam of two Poisson distributions, each with its own probability of success and proportional representation in the final distribution. Increased female sex ratio bias, increased population density and increased proportions of “more successful” males all increased the mean and variance of male fertilization success, based on increased encounter rate among turtles. Small and large male painted turtles enjoy different fertilization success. It is uncertain whether this difference is based on active female choice, cryptic female choice, sperm competition or a combination of factors. Sex ratio simulations predict the opposite result as that predicted by sex ratio theory. These contrary results should be compared to simulations manipulating choosiness and field data from painted turtle populations to clarify mechanisms influencing male reproductive success.
262

Genetic Diversity and Phylogeographic Structure of the Parasitic Plant Genus Conopholis (Orobanchaceae): Implications for Systematics and Post-glacial Colonization of North America

Rodrigues, Anuar 14 January 2014 (has links)
Parasitism in plants is often accompanied by a suite of morphological and physiological changes resulting in a condition known as the ‘parasitic reduction syndrome’. With changes including extreme vegetative reduction, frequently beyond any resemblance to its photosynthetic relatives, accompanied by significant losses of genes linked to photosynthesis, the study of parasitic plants can be challenging. Conopholis (Orobanchaceae) is a small holoparasitic genus distributed across eastern and southwestern North America and Central America. This genus has never been the subject of a molecular phylogenetic or morphometric analyses. In addition, very little is known of the relationships among populations and of their post-glacial history. To investigate the species limits and phylogenetic relationships in Conopholis, we conducted a comprehensive molecular phylogenetic study of the genus as well as a fine-scale morphometric study. Based on plastid and nuclear sequences, Conopholis was found to contain three distinct and well-supported lineages which have varying degrees of overlap with previously proposed taxa. The clustering and ordination analyses of the morphometric study corroborated the molecular data, demonstrating the morphological differentiation between the three lineages detected within Conopholis. A taxonomic re-alignment is proposed for the genus that recognizes three species, C. americana, C. panamensis, and C. alpina. To address genetic diversity and phylogeographic structure of C. americana in eastern North America, microsatellite markers were developed and characterized for the first time in this species. Using these newly generated markers along with sequences from the plastid genome, the persistence of a minimum of two glacial refugia at the last glacial maximum were inferred, one in Florida and southern Alabama and another in the Appalachian Mountains near the southern tip of Blue Ridge Mountains. The diversity seen across the southern Appalachian Mountains supports the hypothesis that populations derived from the southern and northern refugia come together in this area.
263

Broadening genetic diversity in canola (Brassica napus) germplasm using the B. oleracea var. alboglabra C-genome

Bennett, Rick A Unknown Date
No description available.
264

Functional genomic characterization of fruit quality traits in apple (Malus x domestica Borkh.)

Marondedze, Claudius. January 2009 (has links)
<p>&nbsp / </p> <p align="left">The domesticated apple (<i><font face="TimesNewRomanPS-ItalicMT">Malus </font><font face="TimesNewRomanPSMT">x </font><i><font face="TimesNewRomanPS-ItalicMT">domestica </font><font face="TimesNewRomanPSMT">Borkh.), belonging to the </font><i><font face="TimesNewRomanPS-ItalicMT">Malus </font><font face="TimesNewRomanPSMT">genus of the Rosaceae family, is one of the edible pomaceous fruits. Since it is one of the important commercial fruit crops worldwide, the quality of the fruit is crucial to breeders and farmers as it ultimately determines acceptance of a cultivar for consumption. Fruit quality is also a critical determinant factor that is used to estimate the potential of apples to have a long shelf life. The introduction of marker-assisted selection (MAS) has allowed hastening of traditional breeding and selection of high-quality apple cultivars. The availability of genetic linkage maps, constructed by positioning molecular markers throughout the apple genome, enables the detection and analysis of major genes and quantitative trait loci (QTLs) contributing to the quality traits of a given genotype.&nbsp / herefore, the primary aim of this study was to construct a genetic linkage map of the &lsquo / Golden Delicious&rsquo / x &lsquo / Dietrich&rsquo / population for the identification of QTLs associated with fruit quality traits and then to examine the apple fruit pulp proteome with a specific focus on fruit firmness. In this regard, genomic DNA was extracted from leaves of the &lsquo / Golden Delicious&rsquo / x Dietrich&rsquo / population and used in megaplex PCR reactions. The PCR products were analysed prior to scoring of alleles. Polymorphic markers were then used to construct genetic linkage maps. The genetic linkage maps constructed in this study comprise of 167 simple sequence repeats (SSR) markers, 33 of these were newly developed markers. The 17 linkage groups of apple were constructed and aligned to existing apple genetic maps. The maps span 1,437.8 cM and 1,491.5 cM for &lsquo / Golden Delicious&rsquo / and &lsquo / Dietrich&rsquo / , respectively.</font></i></i></i></p>
265

The application of microsatellites to sugarcane parentage determination and varietal identification.

Hack, Simon Matthew. January 2002 (has links)
The use of microsatellite markers has matured and become commonplace for plant genome analyses and is now poised for widespread practical application in sugarcane. Sequence Tagged Microsatellite Site (STMS) amplification is the most prevalent microsatellite-based approach and involves the amplification of a microsatellite by designing primers that flank and hence define the microsatellite site, revealing variation in the length of repeat motifs between individuals. Twenty-six microsatellite primer pairs received from the International Sugarcane Microsatellite Consortium (ISMC) were evaluated and the STMS protocol was optimised to ensure robust and reproducible results. The objectives of this study were to use STMS for sugarcane parentage analysis and fingerprinting. Previously, Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism (RFLP) marker data had suggested that the parentage of a genetic mapping population, sugarcane cross AA40 (N18 x CP57/614), was incorrect. Based on the assertion that the incorrect parentage was as a result of either mislabelling at planting or at seed collection, microsatellite parentage analysis was carried out on eight potential parent pairs (13 cultivars). A total of 75 markers were scored with non-parental bands (12 on average) being observed for all of the potential parent pairs and none could be identified as the true AA40 parents. It has been suggested in other plant species that PCR artefacts could give rise to non-parental bands and to investigate this the marker data of single parent DNA reactions and pooled parent pair DNA reactions or 'synthetic offspring' were compared. The results suggested that either a certain percentage of non-parental bands, perhaps 10% (maximum value observed), should be tolerated in microsatellite parentage analysis or a marker should only be considered to be discriminating for parentage if it is absent in both the parents and the pooled parent pair amplifications. Fingerprinting of 20 cultivars using 14 microsatellite primer pairs was conducted to evaluate the potential of the STMS approach for sugarcane varietal identification. It was found that only two microsatellite primer pairs were required to discriminate between all 20 cultivars with a theoretical number of non-differentiated pairs of cultivars (XK) of only 0.03. This estimator was used to determine the approximate number of microsatellites necessary for large-scale sugarcane fingerprinting. / Thesis (M.Sc.)-University of Natal, Durban, 2002.
266

Adaptive radiation, speciation, and reproductive isolation in African weakly electric fish : (Genus Campylomormyrus, Mormyridae, Teleostei)

Feulner, Philine January 2006 (has links)
The ultimate aim of this study is to better understand the relevance of weak electricity in the adaptive radiation of the African mormyrid fish. The chosen model taxon, the genus Campylomormyrus, exhibits a wide diversity of electric organ discharge (EOD) waveform types. Their EOD is age, sex, and species specific and is an important character for discriminating among species that are otherwise cryptic. After having established a complementary set of molecular markers, I examined the radiation of Campylomormyrus by a combined approach of molecular data (sequence data from the mitochondrial cytochrome b and the nuclear S7 ribosomal protein gene, as well as 18 microsatellite loci, especially developed for the genus Campylomormyrus), observation of ontogeny and diversification of EOD waveform, and morphometric analysis of relevant morphological traits. I built up the first convincing phylogenetic hypothesis for the genus Campylomormyrus. Taking advantage of microsatellite data, the identified phylogenetic clades proved to be reproductively isolated biological species. This way I detected at least six species occurring in sympatry near Brazzaville/Kinshasa (Congo Basin). By combining molecular data and EOD analyses, I could show that there are three cryptic species, characterised by their own adult EOD types, hidden under a common juvenile EOD form. In addition, I confirmed that adult male EOD is species-specific and is more different among closely related species than among more distantly related ones. This result and the observation that the EOD changes with maturity suggest its function as a reproductive isolation mechanism. As a result of my morphometric shape analysis, I could assign species types to the identified reproductively isolated groups to produce a sound taxonomy of the group. Besides this, I could also identify morphological traits relevant for the divergences between the identified species. Among them, the variations I found in the shape of the trunk-like snout, suggest the presence of different trophic specializations; therefore, this trait might have been involved in the ecological radiation of the group. In conclusion, I provided a convincing scenario envisioning an adaptive radiation of weakly electric fish triggered by sexual selection via assortative mating due to differences in EOD characteristics, but caused by a divergent selection of morphological traits correlated with the feeding ecology. / Das übergreifende Ziel dieser Arbeit ist das bessere Verständnis der Bedeutung der schwachen Elektrizität für die adaptive Radiation der Mormyriden Afrikas. Das gewählte Modell-Taxon, die Mormyriden-Gattung Campylomormyrus, zeigt eine große Vielfalt an elektrischen Entladungsformen. Diese Entladungsformen sind alters-, geschlechts-, sowie artspezifisch und ein wichtiges Unterscheidungskriterium von ansonsten kryptischen Arten. Ich untersuchte die Radiation der Gattung Campylomormyrus anhand eines kombinierten Ansatzes aus molekularen Daten (Sequenzdaten des mitochondrialen Cytochrom b Gens und des nukleären S7 ribosomalen Protein-Gens, sowie 18 Mikrosatelliten, speziell von mir entwickelt für die Gattung Campylomormyrus), Beobachtungen der Ontogenie und der Diversifikation der Entladungsform, sowie morphometrische Auswertungen der Gestalt relevanter morphologischer Merkmale. Ich erstellte eine erste phylogenetische Hypothese für die Gattung Campylomormyrus. Durch meine Mikrosatellitendaten, die als unabhängiger Beweis dienten, konnte ich zeigen, dass die identifizierten phylogenetischen Gruppen reproduktiv isolierte biologische Arten sind. Auf diese Weise konnte ich mindesten sechs Arten nachweisen, die in Sympatrie nahe Brazzaville/Kinshasa (Kongo-Becken) vorkommen. Durch die Übereinstimmung von molekularen Daten und Entladungsformen konnte ich drei kryptische Arten unterscheiden, die sich hinter einheitlichen juvenilen Entladungsformen verbergen, sich aber zu verschiedenen adulten Formen entwickelten. Des Weiteren konnte ich zeigen, dass die adulten männlichen Entladungsformen artspezifisch sind und, dass der Unterschied in der Entladungsform zwischen nah verwandten Arten deutlicher ausgeprägt ist als zwischen entfernter verwandten Arten. Dieses Ergebnis und die Beobachtung, dass sich die Entladungsform bei der Geschlechtsreife ändert, weisen darauf hin, dass die Entladungsform als reproduktiver Isolationsmechanismus dient. In einer morphometrischen Gestalt-Analyse verglich ich das Typen-Material der beschriebenen Arten mit den zuvor ermittelten reproduktiv isolierten Gruppen, um auf diese Weise deren Art zu bestimmen. Überdies konnte ich maßgebliche morphologische Unterscheidungsmerkmale identifizieren. Diese äußern sich hauptsächlich in der Gestalt der rüsselartigen Schnauze, könnten daher mit einer trophischen Spezialisierung einhergehen und eine ökologische Artbildung ermöglichen. Zusammenfassend entwickelte ich, in Übereinstimmung mit anderen Untersuchungen und theoretischen Überlegungen, eine plausible Hypothese einer adaptiven Radiation der schwach-elektrischen Fische Afrikas, ausgelöst durch sexuelle Selektion. Diese wirkt durch assortative Verpaarung, basierend auf Charakteristika der elektrischen Entladungsform. Verursacht wird der Prozess der adaptiven Radiation jedoch durch divergierende Selektion morphologischer Merkmale, die in Bezug zur Nahrungsökologie stehen.
267

Clinical relevance of studies on microsatellite instability and DNA mismatch repair system protein expression in endometrial carcinomas / Mikrosatelitų nestabilumo ir DNR pažaidų taisymo sistemos baltymų raiškos tyrimų klinikinė svarba sergant gimdos kūno vėžiu

Kanopienė, Daiva 09 December 2014 (has links)
The evaluation of microsatellite instability in cancer patients might be of clinical importance as a prognostic and predictor factor. The aim of this study − evaluate the frequency and status of microsatellite instability and DNA mismatch repair protein expression in endometrial cancer and to relate the obtained results to clinicopathologic characteristics as well as patient survival. This study enrolled 109 patients.The objectives of the study: to determine the frequency and status of microsatellite instability by using two marker panels (earlier created BAT-25, BAT-26, NR-21, NR-24, MONO-27 and a new BAT-52, BAT-55, BAT-56, BAT-57, BAT-59 panels) recommended by Promega Corporation (USA); to compare the frequency and status of microsatellite instability with tumor clinicopathologic characteristics; to investigate the expression of DNA mismatch repair proteins (MLH1, PMS2, MSH2, and MSH6) in tumors with high-frequency microsatellite instability; to evaluate the impact of microsatellite instability on the survival of patients. The results showed that high-frequency microsatellite instability was detected two times more frequently with the new panel of markers in comparison while using earlier created panel. A statistically significant difference regarding tumor grade and myometrial invasion was found between the groups with high-frequency microsatellite instability and stable phenotype. There was no association between the survival of patients and microsatellite instability. / Mikrosatelitų nestabilumo tyrimai svarbūs vėžio ligos prognozei vertinti bei parenkant individualų gydymą. Darbo tikslas − ištirti mikrosatelitų nestabilumo dažnį, pobūdį ir klaidingai suporuotų nukleotidų DNR pažaidų taisymo sistemos baltymų raišką sergant gimdos kūno vėžiu ir gautus rezultatus susieti su pacienčių klinikinėmis-patologinėmis charakteristikomis bei jų išgyvenamumu. Į stebėsenos perspektyvinį tyrimą buvo įtrauktos 109 pacientės. Darbo uždaviniai: nustatyti mikrosatelitų nestabilumo dažnį ir pobūdį tarp sergančiųjų gimdos kūno vėžiu, panaudojus Promega Corporation (JAV) sukurtus du žymenų rinkinius (anksčiau sukurtą BAT-25, BAT-26, NR-21, NR-24, MONO-27 ir naująjį BAT-52, BAT-55, BAT-56, BAT-57, BAT-59); palyginti mikrosatelitų nestabilumo dažnį ir pobūdį su pacienčių klinikinėmis-patologinėmis charakteristikomis; ištirti DNR pažaidų taisymo sistemos baltymų (MLH1, PMS2, MSH2, MSH6) raišką gimdos kūno navikuose, kuriuose nustatytas didelio dažnio mikrosatelitų nestabilumas; įvertinti mikrosatelitų nestabilumo įtaką pacienčių išgyvenamumui. Tyrimų rezultatai parodė, kad mikrosatelitų didelio dažnio nestabilumas dvigubai dažniau nustatytas naudojant naująjį žymenų rinkinį, palyginti su anksčiau sukurtu žymenų rinkiniu. Statistiškai reikšminga sąsaja konstatuota tarp mikrosatelitų didelio dažnio nestabilumo arba jo nebuvimo ir naviko diferenciacijos laipsnio bei invazijos į miometriumą gylio. Sergančiųjų išgyvenamumas nebuvo susijęs su mikrosatelitų nestabilumu. ... [toliau žr. visą tekstą]
268

Mikrosatelitų nestabilumo ir DNR pažaidų taisymo sistemos baltymų raiškos tyrimų klinikinė svarba sergant gimdos kūno vėžiu / Clinical relevance of studies on microsatellite instability and DNA mismatch repair system protein expression in endometrial carcinomas

Kanopienė, Daiva 09 December 2014 (has links)
Mikrosatelitų nestabilumo tyrimai svarbūs vėžio ligos prognozei vertinti bei parenkant individualų gydymą. Darbo tikslas − ištirti mikrosatelitų nestabilumo dažnį, pobūdį ir klaidingai suporuotų nukleotidų DNR pažaidų taisymo sistemos baltymų raišką sergant gimdos kūno vėžiu ir gautus rezultatus susieti su pacienčių klinikinėmis-patologinėmis charakteristikomis bei jų išgyvenamumu. Į stebėsenos perspektyvinį tyrimą buvo įtrauktos 109 pacientės. Darbo uždaviniai: nustatyti mikrosatelitų nestabilumo dažnį ir pobūdį tarp sergančiųjų gimdos kūno vėžiu, panaudojus Promega Corporation (JAV) sukurtus du žymenų rinkinius (anksčiau sukurtą BAT-25, BAT-26, NR-21, NR-24, MONO-27 ir naująjį BAT-52, BAT-55, BAT-56, BAT-57, BAT-59); palyginti mikrosatelitų nestabilumo dažnį ir pobūdį su pacienčių klinikinėmis-patologinėmis charakteristikomis; ištirti DNR pažaidų taisymo sistemos baltymų (MLH1, PMS2, MSH2, MSH6) raišką gimdos kūno navikuose, kuriuose nustatytas didelio dažnio mikrosatelitų nestabilumas; įvertinti mikrosatelitų nestabilumo įtaką pacienčių išgyvenamumui. Tyrimų rezultatai parodė, kad mikrosatelitų didelio dažnio nestabilumas dvigubai dažniau nustatytas naudojant naująjį žymenų rinkinį, palyginti su anksčiau sukurtu žymenų rinkiniu. Statistiškai reikšminga sąsaja konstatuota tarp mikrosatelitų didelio dažnio nestabilumo arba jo nebuvimo ir naviko diferenciacijos laipsnio bei invazijos į miometriumą gylio. Sergančiųjų išgyvenamumas nebuvo susijęs su mikrosatelitų nestabilumu. / The evaluation of microsatellite instability in cancer patients might be of clinical importance as a prognostic and predictor factor. The aim of this study − evaluate the frequency and status of microsatellite instability and DNA mismatch repair protein expression in endometrial cancer and to relate the obtained results to clinicopathologic characteristics as well as patient survival. This study enrolled 109 patients.The objectives of the study: to determine the frequency and status of microsatellite instability by using two marker panels (earlier created BAT-25, BAT-26, NR-21, NR-24, MONO-27 and a new BAT-52, BAT-55, BAT-56, BAT-57, BAT-59 panels) recommended by Promega Corporation (USA); to compare the frequency and status of microsatellite instability with tumor clinicopathologic characteristics; to investigate the expression of DNA mismatch repair proteins (MLH1, PMS2, MSH2, and MSH6) in tumors with high-frequency microsatellite instability; to evaluate the impact of microsatellite instability on the survival of patients. The results showed that high-frequency microsatellite instability was detected two times more frequently with the new panel of markers in comparison while using earlier created panel. A statistically significant difference regarding tumor grade and myometrial invasion was found between the groups with high-frequency microsatellite instability and stable phenotype. There was no association between the survival of patients and microsatellite instability.
269

Genealogy Reconstruction

Riester, Markus 02 July 2010 (has links) (PDF)
Genealogy reconstruction is widely used in biology when relationships among entities are studied. Phylogenies, or evolutionary trees, show the differences between species. They are of profound importance because they help to obtain better understandings of evolutionary processes. Pedigrees, or family trees, on the other hand visualize the relatedness between individuals in a population. The reconstruction of pedigrees and the inference of parentage in general is now a cornerstone in molecular ecology. Applications include the direct infer- ence of gene flow, estimation of the effective population size and parameters describing the population’s mating behaviour such as rates of inbreeding. In the first part of this thesis, we construct genealogies of various types of cancer. Histopatho- logical classification of human tumors relies in part on the degree of differentiation of the tumor sample. To date, there is no objective systematic method to categorize tumor subtypes by maturation. We introduce a novel algorithm to rank tumor subtypes according to the dis- similarity of their gene expression from that of stem cells and fully differentiated tissue, and thereby construct a phylogenetic tree of cancer. We validate our methodology with expression data of leukemia and liposarcoma subtypes and then apply it to a broader group of sarcomas and of breast cancer subtypes. This ranking of tumor subtypes resulting from the application of our methodology allows the identification of genes correlated with differentiation and may help to identify novel therapeutic targets. Our algorithm represents the first phylogeny-based tool to analyze the differentiation status of human tumors. In contrast to asexually reproducing cancer cell populations, pedigrees of sexually reproduc- ing populations cannot be represented by phylogenetic trees. Pedigrees are directed acyclic graphs (DAGs) and therefore resemble more phylogenetic networks where reticulate events are indicated by vertices with two incoming arcs. We present a software package for pedigree reconstruction in natural populations using co-dominant genomic markers such as microsatel- lites and single nucleotide polymorphism (SNPs) in the second part of the thesis. If available, the algorithm makes use of prior information such as known relationships (sub-pedigrees) or the age and sex of individuals. Statistical confidence is estimated by Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) sampling. The accuracy of the algorithm is demonstrated for simulated data as well as an empirical data set with known pedigree. The parentage inference is robust even in the presence of genotyping errors. We further demonstrate the accuracy of the algorithm on simulated clonal populations. We show that the joint estimation of parameters of inter- est such as the rate of self-fertilization or clonality is possible with high accuracy even with marker panels of moderate power. Classical methods can only assign a very limited number of statistically significant parentages in this case and would therefore fail. The method is implemented in a fast and easy to use open source software that scales to large datasets with many thousand individuals.
270

Stock improvement of giant freshwater prawn (Macrobrachium rosenbergii) in Vietnam: Experimental evaluations of crossbreeding,the impact of domestication on genetic diversity and candidate genes

Thanh Nguyen Unknown Date (has links)
Aquaculture plays an important role in economic development and food security in many countries in the world. World aquaculture production in 2006 was 51.7 million tonnes with an estimated value of US$ 78.8 billion (FAO, 2009). World production will need to increase however by 30-40 million tonnes from its current production level by 2030 to meet growing global demand for fish. In this context, aquaculture in Vietnam has developed rapidly over the past decade and the fisheries sector ranked fourth in terms of export value in 2008 (Vietnamnet, 2008). Total fisheries production in Vietnam in 2007 was 4.149 million tonnes, of which fisheries production from catch and aquaculture were 2.064 and 2.085 million tonnes, respectively. A variety of aquatic species are cultured in Vietnam, but shrimps (mainly Black Tiger shrimp Penaeus monodon, and Pacific white shrimp Litopenaeus vannamei) and ‘tra’ or ‘basa’ catfish are the most common species used in aquaculture. The giant freshwater prawn (GFP), Macrobrachium rosenbergii, is one of the most important crustacean species in inland aquaculture in many countries across the world where this species is either native or exotic. GFP is suitable for culture in a variety of farming systems, including monoculture or polyculture in ponds, pens, and integrated or rotational rice-prawn culture models. The GFP industry worldwide relies totally on wild or unimproved stocks, a practice that threatens the long-term sustainability of GFP farming due to low productivity and vulnerability of farmed stocks to disease. The current status of GFP aquaculture highlights the need for initiation of a systematic stock improvement program for the species to improve economically important traits. Large-scale selective breeding programs have been instigated for some finfish, salmonids and GIFT tilapia for example, and some selective breeding trials have been conducted on crustacean species, namely marine penaeid shrimp and freshwater crayfish. Examples of selective breeding programs on aquatic species have demonstrated that significant genetic gains can be achieved for growth rates with gains of around 10-20% per generation. While a selective breeding program is an option for GFP stock improvement, an alternative approach to improving GFP productivity, potentially with more immediate effect and one that is less expensive, is crossbreeding which may produce heterosis or hybrid vigour in crossbred offspring. Therefore, a crossbreeding strategy was trialed in the current study as a starting point for a stock improvement program for the GFP industry in Vietnam. The current study assessed the growth performance of three GFP strains (two wild Vietnamese strains from the Dong Nai and Mekong rivers, and a single domesticated Hawaiian strain) and their reciprocal crosses in a complete 3x3 diallel cross, i.e. three purebred and six crossbred strains. The diallel cross was carried out over two consecutive generations (G1 and G2). Juveniles for the experiments were produced using single-pair matings. Juveniles from each strain combination were stocked into three replicate hapas for 15 weeks. Growth data (body weight, carapace length, standard length) from the G1 and G2 were pooled for all subsequent analyses as there was no effect of generation on growth traits. Results showed that the Hawaiian strain performed best among purebred strains, and crosses with the Dong Nai or Mekong strains as dams and the Hawaiian strain as sires grew significantly faster than did the purebred Dong Nai or Mekong strains. These results suggest potential for heterosis among some crosses. Growth data were analyzed in depth by partitioning the strain combination (cross) effect into three components: strain additive genetic effects, heterotic effects, and strain reciprocal effects. Strain additive genetic and reciprocal effects were significant sources of variation for all growth traits measured. Strain additive genetic effects were highest for the Hawaiian strain and lowest for the Mekong strain for all growth traits. Reciprocal effects influenced negatively on growth rate of crosses with the Hawaiian (H) strain as dams and the Dong Nai (D) or Mekong (M) as sires compared with their reciprocal crosses (DH and MH). Heterotic effects for all growth traits were small and not significantly different from zero (P > 0.05). These results indicate that a crossbreeding approach based on the strains evaluated here provides only limited potential for improving growth rates based simply on heterotic outcomes and that a likely more productive option would be to trial artificial selection on a diverse synthetic stock. The current study also employed genetic markers (microsatellites) to characterize levels and patterns of genetic diversity in three purebred strains of GFP that originated from the diallel cross above. All three purebred strains showed relative high levels of genetic diversity in terms of allele number and individual heterozygosity across the six marker loci screened. Levels of genetic diversity present in the three purebred strains combined into a single stock were compared with that from a combination of three wild river stocks to assess the impact of domestication on genetic diversity of a ‘synthetic’ population. Results demonstrated that there was no significant loss of genetic diversity in the three purebred strains combined compared with a reference set containing the three wild populations. Therefore, a synthetic population formed from these purebred strains successfully captured the majority of genetic variation present in the wild broodstock. This synthetic population provides a potential stock for a future selective breeding program for GFP in Vietnam. The current study was also the first attempt to identify single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in key growth genes in GFP. Two key candidate genes were targeted, actin and crustacean hyperglycemic hormone (CHH), that are potentially linked to growth performance in GFP. The study screened SNPs in GFP females only, because growth performance of GFP males is influenced strongly by social rank. The study identified four SNPs in intron 3 of the CHH gene that were significantly correlated with individual body weight at harvest, while no SNPs detected in the actin gene were associated with growth traits in GFP. This finding however, needs to be confirmed using larger sample sizes and other GFP lines. The current study has produced important basic knowledge relevant to implementation of an effective stock improvement program for GFP in Vietnam. Results indicate that a selective breeding strategy rather than a crossbreeding approach is likely to be the best strategy for improving GFP culture stocks in Vietnam. In addition, the study demonstrates that application of modern molecular genetic technologies can be efficient in developing a genetically diverse, synthetic population for stock improvement and for identifying potential markers correlated with important commercial traits in GFP. Integration of DNA techniques with traditional breeding practices can facilitate GFP stock improvement in Vietnam and accelerate the industry development when improved lines are available. Some limitations of the current study and recommendations for further work are discussed.

Page generated in 0.0369 seconds