Differential reproductive success of sympatric, naturally
spawning hatchery and wild steelhead trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) through
the adult stage
Jennifer E. McLean, Paul Bentzen, and Thomas P. Quinn
Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci./J. Can. Sci. Halieut. Aquat. 60(4): 433-440 (2003)
Abstract: We
used multilocus microsatellite analysis to compare the reproductive success of
naturally spawning wild steelhead trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) with a
newly established sympatric hatchery population in Forks Creek, Washington,
U.S.A. Hatchery steelhead spawning in the wild had markedly lower reproductive
success than native wild steelhead. Wild females that spawned in 1996 produced
9 times as many adult offspring per capita as did hatchery females that spawned
in the wild. Wild females that spawned in 1997 produced 42 times as many adult
offspring as hatchery females. The wild steelhead population more than met
replacement requirements (approximately 3.7–6.7 adult offspring were produced
per female), but the hatchery steelhead were far below replacement requirements
(<0.5 adults per female). The survival differential was greatest in the
freshwater environment (i.e., production of seaward-migrating juveniles), but
survival at sea favored the hatchery population in 1 year and the wild
population in the next. The poor performance of the hatchery population may be
a consequence of spawning too early in the winter, generations of inadvertent
domestication selection, or a combination of these two.