INVESTIGADORES
BASSO nestor guillermo
artículos
Título:
Colonization of the Southern Patagonia Ocean by Exotic Chinook Salmon
Autor/es:
BECKER, L. A.; M. A. PASCUAL; N. G. BASSO
Revista:
CONSERVATION BIOLOGY
Editorial:
Blackwell Publising, Inc.
Referencias:
Año: 2007 vol. 21 p. 1347 - 1352
ISSN:
0888-8892
Resumen:
Anadromous salmonids have been particularly successful at establishing wild populations in southern
Patagonia, in contrast to their limited success elsewhere outside their native ranges. The most recent such
discovery is a spawning population of Chinook salmon in the Santa Cruz River, which flows into the Atlantic
Ocean from Argentina. We used mitochondrial DNA analysis to discriminate between alternative potential
sources of this population and were able to discard in situ introductions of fish imported directly from California
in the early twentieth century. Our results showed that the fish most likely came from Puget Sound,
Washington, imported into southern Chile for salmon-ranching experiments in the 1980s. This finding provides
concrete evidence of colonization of Atlantic rivers from Pacific locations. The southern Pacific and Atlantic
oceans provide a favorable marine environment for the success of invading salmon. In particular, the waters
associated with fjords, southern channels, and the inshore portion of the Patagonian shelf provide a rather
bounded, continuous waterway for exotic anadromous salmonids, rich in diverse forage species.