Nonanadromous Life History Diversity of Rainbow Trout (Oncorhynchus Mykiss)

Nonanadromous Life History Diversity of Rainbow Trout (Oncorhynchus Mykiss)

Author: Martin C. Arostegui

Publisher:

Published: 2019

Total Pages: 189

ISBN-13:

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Rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) is a salmonid species, native to Pacific Ocean drainages in North America and eastern Russia, which exhibits fluvial (stream-resident), adfluvial (lake-migrant), and anadromous (ocean-migrant) ecotypes. The differentiation of fluvial and anadromous individuals in sympatry is well-studied, whereas comparatively little research has focused on the adfluvial form and its distinction from fluvial individuals in sympatry. Thus, the purpose of this dissertation was to investigate the ecological, genetic, and phenotypic diversity of nonanadromous rainbow trout in a natural stream-lake system to better understand the differentiation of fluvial and adfluvial individuals in sympatry, the basis of residency versus migration in this species, and the role of lakes in salmonid diversification. Rainbow trout were sampled in the lake (thus, by definition, adfluvial) and in several tributary streams (where adfluvial and fluvial individuals may co-occur), and were examined for a variety of features to develop a holistic understanding of the behavior, ecology, and evolution of these life history pathways. Stomach contents and stable isotopes revealed disparate trophic ecology among rainbow trout in connected stream and lake habitats, suggesting both an ontogenetic shift in the diet of adfluvial fish as well as divergence in diet between adfluvial and fluvial ecotypes. Rainbow trout in streams fed primarily on aquatic insects, while those in the lake largely consumed snails and amphipods; however, partial trophic convergence among trout in these two habitats occurred when they incorporated the marine nutrient subsidy of spawning sockeye salmon eggs. Stable isotope data suggested that the minimum size of migration from stream to lake habitat by adfluvial fish was ~150 mm fork length, suggesting a juvenile stream-rearing period of a year or more prior to lake entry. Dietary niche comparisons with sympatric Salvelinus species suggested a greater degree of dietary overlap between rainbow trout and Dolly Varden (S. malma) in streams than between rainbow trout and Arctic char (S. alpinus) in the lake, which may increase the relative fitness benefits of migration over residency for rainbow trout. Restriction site-associated DNA sequencing revealed an association between habitat type (stream or lake) and a chromosomal inversion in the rainbow trout genome as well as numerous single nucleotide polymorphisms, supporting the genetic divergence of adfluvial and fluvial ecotypes in sympatry. Rainbow trout in streams were nearly fixed for the rearranged haplotype of the Omy05 inversion, whereas trout in the lake exhibited a markedly higher frequency of the ancestral, anadromy-associated haplotype. The functions of outlier genes with nonsynonymous mutations among stream- and lake-caught trout paralleled those documented in studies of fluvial and anadromous O. mykiss, highlighting the migratory nature of the adfluvial ecotype even though it is nonanadromous. Structure was present at both non-outlier and outlier loci among and within streams supporting populations nearly fixed for the rearranged Omy05 haplotype (i.e., with a genetic predisposition for stream-residency), highlighting the roles of local adaptation and genetic drift via spatial isolation in population divergence. Assessment of lateral coloration patterns and multivariate analyses of body shape of rainbow trout from stream and lake habitats over a range of body sizes revealed ontogenetic and ecotypic variation in coloration and morphology. Color differences among trout of different size classes and habitats indicated ecotype-specific pathways resulting in different terminal coloration patterns; banded parr in streams transitioned to either a silver coloration suited to pelagic waters in the lake (when adfluvial) or bronze coloration suited to confined cover in streams (when fluvial). The morphology of lake-caught rainbow trout was distinct from that of stream-caught trout, and their morphological differentiation exhibited many shared but some unique patterns compared to sympatric Dolly Varden in streams and Arctic char in the lake. Patterns of morphological variation in rainbow trout among and within habitats suggested the presence of partial migration, in which both fluvial and adfluvial individuals are produced from the same population. A review of the spawning behaviors, rearing strategies, and trophic polymorphisms in lakes among 16 species of salmonids from the genera Oncorhynchus, Salmo, and Salvelinus identified a negative association between the extent of reliance on lakes and the degree of anadromy. Oncorhynchus exhibits the least lake reliance, Salmo an intermediate level, and Salvelinus the greatest; opposite of the anadromy spectrum identified in previous studies. Lakes support life history forms, reproductive ecotypes, and trophic morphs unique to lacustrine habitat, and also support anadromous and fluvial salmonids by providing spawning, rearing, overwintering, and/or summer refuge habitat. Adfluvial and anadromous salmonids exhibit similar migration-associated traits and behaviors including the parr-smolt transformation, sex-biased partial migration, and the presence of precocious 'jack' males.


Rainbow Trout (Oncorhynchus Mykiss) Movement and Mortality in the Flat Brook-Roy Catch and Release Section of New Jersey

Rainbow Trout (Oncorhynchus Mykiss) Movement and Mortality in the Flat Brook-Roy Catch and Release Section of New Jersey

Author: Christopher J. Shea

Publisher:

Published: 2020

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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Rainbow trout are a widely distributed species for recreational angling. The state of New Jersey has 14 streams in which the Bureau of Freshwater Fisheries stocks hatchery raised Rainbow Trout. This paper focuses on the Flatbrook-Roy catch and release section of the Big Flat Brook in northwest NJ. From 2012 to 2015, electrofishing surveys conducted by the NJDEP reported significantly less fish within the Flatbrook-Roy catch and release area, compared to the state's other catch and release area in the South Branch of the Raritan River. This study was designed to investigate and understand the fate of the trout introduced into the Flat Brook-Roy section by looking at their survivorship and movement in and/or out of the catch and release section of the stream. 79 fish were surgically implanted with radio transmitters and introduced into three separate stocking locations from April-September of 2017 and 2018. The data collected across the two years showed that the trout were not traveling outside of the catch and release designated waters. Across the summer months of each year, there was a 100% mortality rate within the sample, all credited to specific mammalian or avian predation events. Between the stocking sites, the trout both stayed longer and survived better at the site with the largest pool dimensions and most in-stream cover. The findings help fisheries management decisions by confirming that the introduced trout do in fact remain within the designated catch and release waters. Future decisions related to fish allocation and fishery regulation should consider stocking sites of adequate size that provide enough cover to increase survivorship and mitigate predation in order to maximize the recreational angling experience.


Performance comparison of Rainbow Trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) under the specific environmental condition in the Highland of Northern Thailand

Performance comparison of Rainbow Trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) under the specific environmental condition in the Highland of Northern Thailand

Author:

Publisher: Cuvillier Verlag

Published: 2004-09-20

Total Pages: 152

ISBN-13: 3736911777

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A comprehensive performance comparison (e.g. 8 000 fish) of different rainbow trout populations was conducted at Doi lnthanon Fisheries Research Unit over two experimental series in order to identify populations which are suitable to establish rainbow trout farming under the specific production conditions of Northern Thailand. This population comparison included survival, growth and reproductive performance. Eyed eggs of seven populations were transferred from the Experimental Trout Station Relliehausen, University of Goettingen, to Doi [nthanon Fisheries Research Unit. Here a special system for population testing in trout was developed. This consisted of separate hatching and rearing of populations till the end of the first feeding stage under two water temperature regimes (11oc, 14°C), further separate rearing of each population up to markable size under ambient water temperatures and common fattening up to pan-size weight.


Diadromy in Fishes

Diadromy in Fishes

Author: Robert Montgomery McDowall

Publisher: Timber Press (OR)

Published: 1988

Total Pages: 330

ISBN-13:

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This book describes the fish which exhibit diadromy, their life history strategies and the implications for fisheries. The book should therefore represent an important volume for workers in fish biology, animal physiology and behaviour, and fisheries.