4.1 Article

Estimating the Ratio of Hatchery-Produced to Wild Adult Steelhead on the Spawning Grounds using Scale Pattern Analyses

Journal

TRANSACTIONS OF THE AMERICAN FISHERIES SOCIETY
Volume 138, Issue 1, Pages 15-22

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1577/T08-032.1

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Hatcheries produce Pacific salmon and trout Oncorhynchus spp. for many purposes, including fishery enhancement. The genetic integrity Of Wild populations spawning near such hatcheries may depend of the efficacy of their spatial or temporal separation from hatchery fish. We describe a simple, novel approach based oil the examination of scales from ail iteroparous species, steelhead O. mykiss, to evaluate whether the ratio of hatchery-produced adults to wild adults oil the spawning grounds met recommended levels. In this river, migrating steelhead are diverted into the hatchery by a weir. Hatchery-produced fish are manually spawned and killed in the hatchery, whereas wild fish are passed over the weir and allowed to spawn naturally upstream from the hatchery. Therefore, in principle, all hatchery-produced adults, should be captured at the hatchery oil their first spawning migration. However. scales from 8.3% (58 of 699) of female and 2.6% (22 of 844) of male hatchery-produced steelhead adults showed evidence Of Previous Spawning migrations. Although this frequency was lower than the incidence of repeal spawning by wild fish (males. 11.0%; females, 20.3%), these records nevertheless indicated significant reproductive opportunities in the wild for hatchery-produced fish. Combining these frequencies of repeat spawning with estimates Of file Survival and numbers of wild fish. we modeled the ratio of hatchery to wild fish on the spawning grounds using data from eight return years. This ratio exceeded the recommended levels under all reasonable scenarios modeled (14.7-89.6% hatchery fish). Combined with evidence of spatial and temporal overlap, Our data Suggest that unless changes are made to increase the capture efficiency of adults at Washington State's Forks Creek Hatchery and similar hatcheries relying oil segregated stocks. the risks of genetic introgression and ecological interactions with wild steelhead populations will remain high.

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