Abstract Local adaptation is often portrayed as uniform fitness disadvantages of immigrants relative to locals. Yet dispersal costs vary with origin, sex and life-history traits, shaping the balance between gene flow and adaptation. We quantified these heterogeneous costs by comparing the reproductive success (RS) of local and immigrant individuals using a 15-year genetic pedigree of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar), including over 1100 adults and 3400 juveniles. Immigrants represented 19.5% of adu
Selection against dispersers: sex, age and origin-dependent fitness differences in wild Atlantic salmon
Emilio Egal·Mathieu Buoro·Yann Czorlich·Geir H. Bolstad·Craig R. Primmer·Aurélie Manicki·Josu Elso·Guillaume Evanno·Charles Perrier
