Stocking success of local-origin fry and impact of hatchery ancestry: monitoring a new steelhead (Oncorhynchus mykiss) stocking program in a Minnesota tributary to Lake Superior
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Abstract
The inception of a hatchery program to rebuild a naturalized steelhead (Oncorhynchus mykiss) population in Minnesota waters of Lake Superior gave us the rare opportunity to monitor the success of fry stocking and determine if hatchery ancestry can reduce fitness of stocked fish in the early generations of a stocking program. Through genetic monitoring of two year classes, we determined that hatchery adults produced 1.3-6.2 times as many age-2 juveniles per female than naturally spawning fish. Survival of stocked fry of parents born in a hatchery relative to those of parents born in the wild was 70% in paired-stocking comparisons. These results suggest that stocking local-origin fry can increase the short-term abundance of depleted populations and that fish with no hatchery history are a better source for supplemental stocking. Additionally, sampling small numbers of adults for broodstock created genetically distinct groups, which could potentially cause long-term genetic change in the population. Genetic monitoring of adults will be essential to determining whether differences observed persist through the life cycle of the stocked fish.
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