logo
Find us on
Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
              
logo 11/24/2024 6:04:28 AM     
Researchers explore ways to make hatchery steelhead more like wild fish 
By Harry Jones US Source: thenewsmotion 1/18/2022
Harry Jones
Hatchery-raised steelhead trout have offspring that are good at gaining size under hatchery conditions but don’t survive as well in streams as steelhead whose parents are wild fish, new research by Oregon State University shows.

The results, published in PLOS One, suggest that it may be possible to change rearing methods to produce hatchery fish that are more like wild steelhead, which could help them survive better and also allay concerns about them mixing with wild populations, said OSU scientist Michael Blouin, who led the study.

Steelhead hatcheries provide fish for harvest and to supplement wild stocks of an iconic species that’s ecologically, culturally and recreationally significant.
 

Like salmon, steelhead (Oncorhynchus mykiss) are anadromous, meaning they travel to the ocean as “smolts” and return to their natal streams to spawn. Hatcheries raise eggs and juvenile fish for about a year and then release them to go to sea.

It is well established that hatchery fish make better brood stock than wild fish, producing more fish that return for harvest, Blouin said. On the other hand, hatchery fish produce fewer returning offspring when both spawn in the wild.

This tradeoff appears to happen because hatcheries are inadvertently favoring genes that promote growth in the hatchery environment at a cost to survival in the wild, he said.

 
Trout, Rainbow Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
3026Hawaii anglers split over measure to ban the use of drones for fishinghawaii newsnow2022-05-12US
3027Pennsylvania takes action to prevent invasive snakehead fish from taking over Susquehanna RiverWGAL2022-05-13US
3028Indonesia cancels fisheries infrastructure projects in Maluku region amid lack of fundsmongabay2022-05-11ID
3029Fish make sounds that could help scientists protect themwashingtonpost2022-05-10US
3030Commercial fishermen concerned recreational fishing is leading to overfishingfox4now2022-05-12US
3031Colorado fish named after racial slur has been renamednbc11news2022-05-13US
3032Евросанкции не помешают ловить рыбуРыболовство2022-05-25RU
3033Meet the Lumpsuckers. Shedd’s Newcomer Is a Fish That Can Barely Swim, Is Covered in Teethwttw2022-05-06US
3034Millions of tonnes of dead animals: the growing scandal of fish wastetheguardian2022-05-09UK
3035Research Team Uses Green Light to Make Fish Grow 60% Fasternippon2022-05-10JP
3036Perth scientists reel in deepest fish ever caught in Australian waters9news2022-05-10AU
3037US fishing haul fell 10% during first pandemic yearapnews2022-05-12US
3038Taiwan study finds large amounts of microplastics in fishtaipeitimes2022-05-08TW
3039Sardines: The interesting story of how this fish got its namepulse2022-05-08NG
3040High levels of persistent chemicals found in some Maine fishwabi2022-05-05US
304152,000 Fish Die After Low Water Trapped Them In Kansas City's Brush Creekkcur2021-06-17US
3042Low flows, high temperatures killing fish in Okanagan creekspentictonwesternnews2021-08-07CA
3043'Acute intoxication' blamed for massive fish kill in Ottawa RiverCTV Ottawa2019-07-18CA
3044Up to a million fish dead: Murray-Darling River disaster worsens2gb2019-08-01AU
3045Tonnes of dead fish wash up on shore of polluted Lebanese lakesaltwire2021-04-30LB
3046Record spring salmon run on Butte Creek turns into disasterredgreenandblue2021-08-01US
3047High fish mortality rates possible after record-breaking B.C. floodsGlobal News2021-11-25CA
3048P.E.I. river fish kills called 'catastrophic'CBC News2011-07-27CA
3049Trout colony thriving in urbanized stream / Discovery buoys effort to restore Codornices Creeksfgate2004-09-09US
3050First Chinook salmon reported in Codornices Creekberkeleyside2012-12-05US

133 134 135 121 of [136 - pages.]