We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
Ecological and Demographic Costs of Releasing Nonmigratory Juvenile Hatchery Steelhead in the Methow River, Washington.
- Authors
Snow, Charles G.; Murdoch, Andrew R.; Kahler, Thomas H.
- Abstract
We classified juvenile hatchery summer steelheadOncorhynchus mykissreleased from Wells Hatchery, Washington, from three brood years (2002–2004) as those that migrated volitionally (VM) from rearing ponds or as those that were forced out of rearing ponds after volitional migration concluded (NM). Fish were implanted with PIT tags prior to release and we used recreational angling equipment to recapture tagged fish to estimate the relative contribution rates of VM and NM release groups to the stream-resident population of juvenile hatchery summer steelhead in the Twisp River. We also evaluated the survival for each group from release to McNary Dam, and from release to adult return (SAR) at Bonneville and Wells dams on the Columbia River. Overall, we estimated that 82% of stream-resident hatchery juvenile summer steelhead originated from releases of NM fish. The probability of survival from release to McNary Dam was significantly greater for VM groups (mean, 0.4817; SE, 0.023) than for NM groups (mean, 0.2182; SE, 0.021) within each year. The mean SAR to Bonneville and Wells dams was 1.54% and 1.26%, respectively, for VM fish and 0.37% and 0.32%, respectively, for NM fish; the differences were significant between groups within each year. As an index of release strategy performance, VM releases resulted in one stream-resident fish recaptured for every 7.8 adults returned, while NM releases produced one stream-resident fish recaptured for every 0.48 adults returned. These results suggest that managers employ a volitional release strategy to significantly reduce the abundance of stream-resident juvenile hatchery steelhead by not releasing NM fish into waters inhabited by anadromous fishes, thereby reducing negative ecological interactions between hatchery residual steelhead and wild salmonids at little cost to adult returns. Received February 25, 2013; accepted July 8, 2013
- Subjects
METHOW River (Wash.); WASHINGTON (State); STEELHEAD trout; FISH hatcheries; INFANCY of fishes; FISH ecology
- Publication
North American Journal of Fisheries Management, 2013, Vol 33, Issue 6, p1100
- ISSN
0275-5947
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1080/02755947.2013.824938