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
5401Alberta Cree man successfully challenges illegal fishing ticketCBC News2018-10-03CA
5402Fish fall from sky with rain in northern MexicoAssociated Press2019-05-06MX
5403B.C. salmon fishing guides fear for livelihoods amid fishery closurevancouver sun2019-05-04CA
5404'This is all optical': Sport fishers slam DFO's chinook closuresCBC News 2019-05-01CA
5405Fisheries audit B.C. fish processor after reports of illegal fish barteringnational post2019-05-03CA
5406Russia learning to live with less pollockseafoodsource2019-05-01RU
5407Canada closer to allowing Asian carp as lobster bait, depending on test outcomesCBC News2019-04-29CA
5408They’re biting at this Peterborough fishing derbythe peterborough examiner2019-04-27CA
5409Fishing derbies feel sting of new salmon rulessooke news mirror2019-04-26CA
5410Freshwater fish species richness has increased in Ohio River Basin since '60sPLOS2019-04-24US
5411Small fish, big goalshouston-today2019-04-24CA
5412Comox Valley fishing charters feel pinch of restrictionscomoxvalleyrecord2019-04-22CA
5413Former pulp mill town ground zero in Nova Scotia fish farms debateCBC News 2019-04-17CA
5414Government of Canada takes action to address Fraser River Chinook declineFisheries and Oceans Canada2019-04-16CA
5415New Fisheries Act could mark a turning point for Canada’s depleted fisheriesHill Times2019-04-15CA
5416Estonia warns anglers off thin iceBBC Monitoring2019-03-19ES
5417Kenora based angler Jeff Gustafson joins BassmasterCBC News2019-02-07US
54182019 Lake Erie fishing outlook is great news for anglersOther News2019-04-12US
5419Atlantic mackerel stocks down 86% over past 20 years, says new DFO reportCBC News2019-04-10CA
5420Environment Canada approves genetically-modified salmon raised in P.E.I.THE CANADIAN PRESS2019-04-11CA
5421Governments of Canada and Nova Scotia fund projects to boost innovation and productivity in the fish and seafood sectorFisheries and Oceans Canada, Maritimes Region2019-04-10CA
5422Scientists are split on whether a virus is killing B.C.’s salmonStar Vancouver2019-04-06CA
5423Spring fish kill is natural phenomenonThe Associated Press2019-04-08UK
5424Small rebound for N.L.'s northern cod, but stock still in critical zoneThe Canadian Press 2019-04-02CA
5425Alberta guides encounter exceptional fishing, hospitality while filming documentary in OmanCTV Calgary 2019-03-14CA

214 215 216 216 of [217 - pages.]