HATCHERY-WILD
STEELHEAD ECOLOGICAL INTERACTIONS
Kostow,
Kathryn, Anne Marshall, and Stevan R. Phelps. 2003. Naturally spawning hatchery
steelhead contribution to smolt production but experience low reproductive
success. Trans. Am. Fish. Soc. 132:780-790.
We used genetic
mixture analysis to show that hatchery summer-run steelhead Oncorhynchus mykiss, an introduced life
history in the Clackamas basin of Oregon, where only winter-run steelhead are
native, contributed to the naturally produced smolts out-migrating from the
basin. Hatchery-produced summer
steelhead smolts were released starting in 1971, and returning adults were
passed above a dam into the upper Clackamas River until 1999. In the 2 years of our study, summer
steelhead adults, mostly hatchery fish, made up 60% to 82% of the natural
spawners in the river. Genetic results
provided evidence that interbreeding between hatchery summer and wild winter
steelhead was likely minor. Hatchery
summer steelhead reproductive success was relatively poor. We estimated that they produced only about
one-third the number of smolts per parent that wild winter steelhead
produced. However, the proportions of
summer natural smolts were large (36-53% of the total naturally produced smolts
following emigration. Counts at the dam
demonstrated that hatchery summer steelhead predominated on natural spawning
grounds throughout the 24-year hatchery program. Our data support a conclusion that hatchery summer steelhead
adults and their offspring contribute to wild winter steelhead population
declines through competition for spawning and rearing habitat.