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
2426Teen breaks record after catching 29-year-old fish9news2022-09-15AU
2427More than 25,000 lionfish harvested during FWC's 2022 challengewtsp2022-09-16US
2428Turkish engineer makes leather purses out of puffer fish skinthestar2022-09-12TR
2429Fishing company searching for lost net full of fishkplctv2022-09-16US
2430Scientists declare support for the banning of destructive industrial fishing methodsnational geographic2022-09-12EU
2431Floating event space forms glimmering fish eye in a Norwegian fjordnewatlas2022-09-13NO
2432Southwest Airlines Employee Babysits Passenger's Pet Fish For 4 Monthssimpleflying2022-09-16US
2433Hawaii fisherman catches huge octopusFox News2022-09-24US
2434Mowi Scotland appeals inconsistent salmon farm planning decisionThe Fish Site2022-09-23UK
2435NOAA pledges $14 million for aquaculture investmentsThe Fish Site2022-09-23US
2436На Чукотке побит 10-летний рекорд добычи кетыРыболовство2022-09-22RU
2437Россия и Турция рассматривают проекты по выращиванию лососевых в Черном мореРыболовство2022-09-22RU
2438Little fish, big consequences: How six government decisions impact the future of forage fishoceana2022-09-09CA
2439Alberta fish farmer suing province over impacts of ‘failing to control’ whirling diseasemsn2022-09-21CA
2440Climate-Fueled Wildfires Worsen Danger for Struggling FishAssociated Press2022-09-21US
2441Spain Gives Personhood Status to Mar Menor Salt-Water LagoonAssociated Press2022-09-21NZ
2442Резиновый забросОхотники.ру2022-09-16RU
2443Mystery of dead sturgeon in central B.C. has scientists asking for helpCBC News2022-09-09CA
2444California fisherman capture video of extremely rare megamouth sharkFox News2022-09-16US
2445В Рыбинское водохранилище выпущено 11 тысяч экземпляров молоди судакаРыболовство2022-09-19RU
2446С донкой на сомаОхотники.ру2022-09-19RU
2447Native trout returned to alpine lake in Banff National Parklacombeexpress2022-09-03CA
2448Fish-eradication project in Miramichi has begun, opponents sayCBC News2022-09-08CA
2449Tropical fish farms ordered to turn over their GMO fish to Thai Fisheries Departmentthaipbsworld2022-09-10TH
2450Millions spent to keep invasive fish out of the Great LakesWNIJ-Northern Public Radio2022-09-04US

215 216 217 97 of [218 - pages.]