Lower fitness of hatchery and hybrid rainbow trout
compared to naturalized populations in Lake Superior tributaries L. M. MILLER*,
T. CLOSE and A. R. KAPUSCINSKI*
Abstract
We have documented an early life survival advantage by
naturalized populations of anadromous rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss over a
more recently introduced hatchery population and outbreeding depression
resulting from interbreeding between the two strains. We tested the hypothesis
that offspring of naturalized and hatchery trout, and reciprocal hybrid
crosses, survive equally from fry to age 1+ in isolated reaches of Lake
Superior tributary streams in Minnesota. Over the first summer, offspring of
naturalized females had significantly greater survival than offspring of
hatchery females in three of four comparisons (two streams and 2 years of
stocking). Having an entire naturalized genome, not just a naturalized mother,
was important for survival over the first winter. Naturalized offspring
outperformed all others in survival to age 1+ and hybrids had reduced, but
intermediate, survival relative to the two pure crosses.
Averaging over years and streams, survival relative to
naturalized offspring was 0.59 for hybrids with naturalized females, 0.37 for
the reciprocal hybrids, and 0.21 for hatchery offspring. Our results indicate
that naturalized rainbow trout are better adapted to the conditions of
Minnesota's tributaries to Lake Superior so that they outperform the
hatchery-propagated strain in the same manner that many native populations of
salmonids outperform hatchery or transplanted fish. Continued stocking of the
hatchery fish may conflict with a management goal of sustaining the naturalized
populations.