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Rainbow trout

The rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) is a species of trout native to cold-water tributaries of the Pacific Ocean in Asia and North America. The steelhead (sometimes called steelhead trout) is an anadromous (sea-run) form of the coastal rainbow trout (O. m. irideus) or Columbia River redband trout (O. m. gairdneri) that usually returns to freshwater to spawn after living two to three years in the ocean. Freshwater forms that have been introduced into the Great Lakes and migrate into tributaries to spawn are also called steelhead.

Rainbow trout
Adult rainbow trout

Secure (NatureServe)[1]
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Salmoniformes
Family: Salmonidae
Genus: Oncorhynchus
Species:
O. mykiss
Binomial name
Oncorhynchus mykiss
(Walbaum, 1792)
Synonyms[2]
previous scientific names
  • Salmo mykiss Walbaum, 1792 Parasalmo mykiss (Walbaum, 1792) Salmo purpuratus Pallas, 1814 Salmo penshinensis Pallas, 1814 Parasalmo penshinensis (Pallas, 1814) Salmo gairdnerii Richardson, 1836 Fario gairdneri (Richardson, 1836) Oncorhynchus gairdnerii (Richardson, 1836) Salmo gairdnerii gairdnerii Richardson, 1836 Salmo rivularis Ayres, 1855 Salmo iridea Gibbons, 1855 Salmo gairdnerii irideus Gibbons, 1855 Salmo irideus Gibbons, 1855 Trutta iridea (Gibbons, 1855) Salmo truncatus Suckley, 1859 Salmo masoni Suckley, 1860 Oncorhynchus kamloops Jordan, 1892 Salmo kamloops (Jordan, 1892) Salmo rivularis kamloops (Jordan, 1892) Salmo gairdneri shasta Jordan, 1894 Salmo gilberti Jordan, 1894 Salmo nelsoni Evermann, 1908

Adult freshwater stream rainbow trout average between 0.5 and 2.5 kilograms (1 and 5 lb), while lake-dwelling and anadromous forms may reach 9 kg (20 lb). Coloration varies widely based on subspecies, forms, and habitat. Adult fish are distinguished by a broad reddish stripe along the lateral line, from gills to the tail, which is most vivid in breeding males.

Wild-caught and hatchery-reared forms of the species have been transplanted and introduced for food or sport in at least 45 countries and every continent except Antarctica. Introductions to locations outside their native range in the United States, Southern Europe, Australia, New Zealand, and South America have damaged native fish species. Introduced populations may affect native species by preying on them, out-competing them, transmitting contagious diseases (such as whirling disease), or hybridizing with closely related species and subspecies. The rainbow trout is included in the list of the top 100 globally invasive species. Other introductions into waters previously devoid of fish or with severely depleted stocks of native fish have created sport fisheries, such as the Great Lakes and Wyoming's Firehole River.

Some local populations of specific subspecies, or in the case of steelhead, distinct population segments, are listed as either threatened or endangered under the Endangered Species Act. The steelhead is the official state fish of Washington.[3]

Taxonomy edit

The scientific name of the rainbow trout is Oncorhynchus mykiss.[4] The species was originally named by German naturalist and taxonomist Johann Julius Walbaum in 1792 based on type specimens from the Kamchatka Peninsula in Siberia. Walbaum's original species name, mykiss, was derived from the local Kamchatkan name used for the fish, mykizha. The name of the genus is from the Greek ὄγκος (ónkos) “lump, bend, hook” and ῥύγχος (rhúnkhos) “snout”, in reference to the hooked jaws of males in the mating season (the "kype").[5]

Sir John Richardson, a Scottish naturalist, named a specimen of this species Salmo gairdneri in 1836 to honor Meredith Gairdner, a Hudson's Bay Company surgeon at Fort Vancouver on the Columbia River who provided Richardson with specimens.[6] In 1855, William P. Gibbons, the curator of Geology and Mineralogy[7] at the California Academy of Sciences, found a population and named it Salmo iridia (Latin: rainbow), later corrected to Salmo irideus. These names faded once it was determined that Walbaum's description of type specimens was conspecific and therefore had precedence.[8] In 1989, morphological and genetic studies indicated that trout of the Pacific Basin were genetically closer to Pacific salmon (Oncorhynchus species) than to the Salmos – brown trout (Salmo trutta) or Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) of the Atlantic Basin.[9] Thus, in 1989, taxonomic authorities moved the rainbow, cutthroat, and other Pacific Basin trout into the genus Oncorhynchus.[5] Walbaum's name had precedence, so the species name Oncorhynchus mykiss became the scientific name of the rainbow trout. The previous species names irideus and gairdneri were adopted as subspecies names for the coastal rainbow and Columbia River redband trout, respectively.[5] Anadromous forms of the coastal rainbow trout (O. m. irideus) or Columbia River redband trout (O. m. gairdneri) are commonly known as steelhead.[4]

Subspecies edit

Subspecies of Oncorhynchus mykiss are listed below as described by fisheries biologist Robert J. Behnke (2002).[10]

Geographical group Common name Scientific name Range Image
Type subspecies Kamchatkan rainbow trout O. m. mykiss (Walbaum, 1792) Western Pacific: the Kamchatka Peninsula, and has been recorded from the Commander Islands east of Kamchatka, and sporadically in the Sea of Okhotsk, as far south as the mouth of the Amur River
Coastal forms Coastal rainbow trout O. m. irideus (Gibbons, 1855) Pacific Ocean tributaries from Aleutian Islands in Alaska south to Southern California. Anadromous forms are known as steelhead, freshwater forms as rainbow trout.  
 
Ocean (a.k.a. "steelhead") and fresh water forms of coastal rainbow trout
O. m. irideus
Beardslee trout O. m. irideus var. beardsleei (not a true subspecies, but a genetically unique lake-dwelling variety of the coastal rainbow trout) (Jordan, 1896)[11] Isolated in Lake Crescent, Washington
Redband forms Columbia River redband trout O. m. gairdneri (Richardson, 1836) Found in the Columbia River and its tributaries in Montana, Washington and Idaho. Anadromous forms are known as redband steelhead.  
Columbia River redband trout
O. m. gairdneri
Athabasca rainbow trout O. m. spp., considered by Behnke as a form of O. m. gairdneri, but considered a separate subspecies by biologist L. M. Carl of the Ontario Ministry of Resources, Aquatic Ecosystems Research Section and associates from work published in 1994.[12] Distributed throughout the headwaters of the Athabasca River system in Alberta
McCloud River redband trout O. m. stonei (Jordan, 1894) Native to the McCloud River, upstream of Middle Falls, and its tributaries in Northern California, south of Mount Shasta.
Sheepheaven Creek redband trout O. m. spp. Native to Sheepheaven Creek, Siskiyou County, California. Sheepheaven Creek redband were transplanted into Swamp Creek in 1972 and 1974 and into Trout Creek in 1977.
Great Basin redband trout O. m. newberrii (Girard, 1859) Native in southeastern Oregon and parts of California and Nevada on the periphery of the Great Basin.
Eagle Lake trout O. m. aquilarum (Snyder, 1917) Endemic to Eagle Lake in Lassen County, California.
Kamloops rainbow trout O. m. kamloops strain (Jordan, 1892) Native to several large British Columbia lakes, particularly Kamloops Lake and Kootenay Lake. Known for its very large size.
Kern River golden trout Golden trout O. m. aguabonita (Jordan, 1892) Native to Golden Trout Creek (tributary to the Kern River), Volcano Creek (tributary to Golden Trout Creek), and the South Fork Kern River.  
Kern River golden trout
O. m. aguabonita
Kern River rainbow trout O. m. gilberti (Jordan, 1894) Endemic to the Kern River and tributaries in Tulare County, California. Its current range is drastically reduced from its historic range. Remnant populations live in the Kern River above Durrwood Creek, in upper Ninemile, Rattlesnake, and Osa creeks, and possibly in upper Peppermint Creek.
Little Kern golden trout O. m. whitei (Evermann, 1906) Endemic to about 160 kilometres (100 mi) of the Little Kern River and tributaries of Tulare County, California. Their current range is restricted to five headwater streams in the Kern River basin (Wet Meadows, Deadman, Soda Spring, Willow, Sheep, and Fish creeks) plus an introduced population in Coyote Creek, a tributary of the Kern River.[13]
Mexican forms Mexican rainbow trout
*Rio Yaqui, Rio Mayo and Guzman trout
*Rio San Lorenzo and Arroyo la Sidra trout
*Rio del Presidio trout
O. m. nelsoni (Evermann, 1908) Sometimes referred to as Nelson's trout, occurs in three distinct geographic groups. The taxonomy of these trout is subject to ongoing research, and there may be significant diversity of forms in this group.[14]
Mutated forms Golden rainbow trout
or
Palomino trout
So-called golden rainbow trout or palomino trout are bred from a single mutated color variant of O. mykiss that originated in a West Virginia fish hatchery in 1955.[15][16] They are also known as banana trout. It is stocked outside of West Virginia but West Virginia still stocks 50,000 palominos a year.[17] The golden rainbow trout is predominantly yellowish, lacking the typical green field and black spots, but retaining the diffuse red stripe.[16] The palomino trout is a mixture of golden and common rainbow trout, resulting in an intermediate color. The golden rainbow trout is not the same subspecies as the naturally occurring O. m. aguabonita, the Kern River golden trout of California.[16]  
Golden rainbow trout[18]

Description edit

Resident freshwater rainbow trout adults average between 0.5 and 2.5 kg (1 and 5 lb) in riverine environments, while lake-dwelling, and anadromous forms may reach 9 kg (20 lb). Coloration varies widely between regions and subspecies. Adult freshwater forms are generally blue-green or olive green with heavy black spotting over the length of the body. Adult fish have a broad reddish stripe along the lateral line, from gills to the tail, which is most pronounced in breeding males.[10] The caudal fin is squarish and only mildly forked. Lake-dwelling and anadromous forms are usually more silvery in color with the reddish stripe almost completely gone. Juvenile rainbow trout display parr marks (dark vertical bars) typical of most salmonid juveniles. In some redband and golden trout forms, parr marks are typically retained into adulthood.[19] Some coastal rainbow trout (O. m. irideus) and Columbia River redband trout (O. m. gairdneri) populations and cutbow hybrids may also display reddish or pink throat markings similar to cutthroat trout.[20] In many regions, hatchery-bred trout can be distinguished from native trout via fin clips.[21] Fin clipping the adipose fin is a management tool used to identify hatchery-reared fish.[22]

Life cycle edit

Rainbow trout, including steelhead forms, generally spawn in early to late spring (January to June in the Northern Hemisphere and September to November in the Southern Hemisphere) when water temperatures reach at least 6 to 7 °C (42 to 44 °F).[23] The maximum recorded lifespan for a rainbow trout is 11 years.[24]

Freshwater life cycle edit

 
Spawning steelhead
 
Eggs in gravel and rainbow trout alevin
 
Typical juvenile rainbow trout showing parr marks
 
Typical adult rainbow trout

Freshwater resident rainbow trout usually inhabit and spawn in small to moderately large, well-oxygenated, shallow rivers with gravel bottoms. They are native to the alluvial or freestone streams that are typical tributaries of the Pacific basin but introduced rainbow trout have established wild, self-sustaining populations in other river types such as bedrock and spring creeks. Lake-resident rainbow trout are usually found in moderately deep, cool lakes with adequate shallows and vegetation to support the production of sufficient food sources. Lake populations generally require access to gravelly-bottomed streams to be self-sustaining.[25]

Spawning sites are usually a bed of fine gravel in a riffle above a pool. A female trout clears a redd in the gravel by turning on her side and beating her tail up and down. Female rainbow trout usually produce 2000 to 3000 4-to-5-millimetre (532316 in) eggs per kilogram of weight.[26] During spawning, the eggs fall into spaces between the gravel, and immediately the female begins digging at the upstream edge of the nest, covering the eggs with the displaced gravel. As eggs are released by the female, a male moves alongside and deposits milt (sperm) over the eggs to fertilize them. The eggs usually hatch in about four to seven weeks although the time of hatching varies greatly with region and habitat. Newly hatched trout are called sac fry or alevin. In approximately two weeks, the yolk sac is completely consumed, and fry commence feeding mainly on zooplankton. The growth rate of rainbow trout varies with area, habitat, life history, and quality and quantity of food.[27] As fry grow, they begin to develop "parr" marks or dark vertical bars on their sides. In this juvenile stage, immature trout are often called "parr" because of the marks. These small juvenile trout are sometimes called 'fingerlings' because they are approximately the size of a human finger. In streams where rainbow trout are stocked for sport fishing, but no natural reproduction occurs, some of the stocked trout may survive and grow or "carryover" for several seasons before they are caught or perish.[28]

 
Steelhead from Lake Erie
 
Male ocean-phase steelhead
 
Male spawning-phase steelhead

Steelhead life cycle edit

The oceangoing (anadromous) form, including those returning for spawning, are known as steelhead in Canada and the U.S.[29] In Tasmania they are commercially propagated in sea cages and are known as ocean trout, although they are the same species.[30]

Like salmon, steelhead return to their original hatching grounds to spawn. Similar to Atlantic salmon, but unlike their Pacific Oncorhynchus salmonid kin, steelhead are iteroparous (able to spawn several times, each time separated by months) and make several spawning trips between fresh and salt water, although fewer than 10 percent of native spawning adults survive from one spawning to another.[31] The survival rate for introduced populations in the Great Lakes is as high as 70 percent. As young steelhead transition from freshwater to saltwater, a process called "smoltification" occurs where the trout undergoes physiological changes to allow it to survive in seawater.[32] There are genetic differences between freshwater and steelhead populations that may account for the smoltification in steelhead.[33]

Juvenile steelhead may remain in the river for one to three years before smolting and migrating to sea. Individual steelhead populations leave the ocean and migrate into their freshwater spawning tributaries at different times of the year. Two general forms exist—"summer-run steelhead" and "winter-run steelhead". Summer-run fish leave the ocean between May and October before their reproductive organs are fully mature. They mature in freshwater while en route to spawning grounds where they spawn in the spring. Summer-run fish generally spawn in longer, more inland rivers such as the Columbia River. Winter-run fish are ready to spawn when they leave the ocean, typically between November and April, and spawn shortly after returning to fresh water. Winter-run fish generally spawn in shorter, coastal rivers typically found along the Olympic Peninsula and British Columbia coastline,[23] and summer-run fish are found in some shorter, coastal streams.[34] Once steelhead enter riverine systems and reach suitable spawning grounds, they spawn just like resident freshwater rainbow trout.[23]

Growth and oxidative stress on mitochondria edit

During periods of rapid growth and aging, trout display high levels of metabolic activity. High metabolic activity has been correlated with increased levels of oxidative stress [35][36] and decreased machinery repair [37] in rainbow trout. During high oxidative stress, the mitochondria are the most important organelle contributing to tissue damage because of their role in metabolism and production of reactive oxygen species. In a study done by Almaida-Pagàn et al.,[38] researchers identified changes to the heart and brain mitochondrial membrane phospholipid composition in rainbow trout due to the differing levels of oxidative stress each organ faced during a high-stress time such as rapid growth and development. Stock rainbow trout of ages 1, 2, and 4 years had their heart and brain mitochondria isolated and analyzed for fatty acid composition. The tissues showed an overall similar percentage of total phospholipids but differed in the types and proportions of phospholipids. With age, the heart showed more unsaturated phospholipids, which are more susceptible to peroxidation, and thus, damage. The brain mitochondria of rainbow trout show decreased levels of docosahexaenoic acid and a lower peroxidation index, suggesting a lower susceptibility to damage by oxidative stress and a different reaction to growth compared to heart mitochondria. During the trout's development into an adult, a time of intense growth, the mitochondrial membrane composition and fluidity changes, which can cause defects in the electron transport chain. These defects combined with altered machinery repair and reactive oxygen species may cause more detrimental effects on the mitochondria in the fish as it matures.

Feeding edit

Rainbow trout are predators with a varied diet and will eat nearly anything they can capture. They are not as piscivorous or aggressive as brown trout or chars. Rainbow trout, including juvenile steelhead in fresh water, routinely feed on larval, pupal, and adult forms of aquatic insects (typically caddisflies, stoneflies, mayflies and aquatic diptera). They also eat fish eggs and adult forms of terrestrial insects (typically ants, beetles, grasshoppers, and crickets) that fall into the water, as well as algae.[39] Other prey includes small fish up to one-third of their length, crayfish, shrimp, and other crustaceans. As rainbow trout grow, the proportion of fish consumed increases in most populations. Some lake-dwelling forms may become planktonic feeders. In rivers and streams populated with other salmonid species, rainbow trout eat varied fish eggs, including those of salmon, brown and cutthroat trout, mountain whitefish, and the eggs of other rainbow trout. Rainbows also consume decomposing flesh from the carcasses of other fish. They have even been observed to have consumed hatchling snakes, such as the barred grass snake (Natrix helvetica). [40] Adult steelhead in the ocean feed primarily on other fish, squid and amphipods.[41] If food has proper amount of tryptophan, it will affect positively for enzyme activity occurred inside body and immune genes. So immune system and stress resistance of rainbow trout improve.[42]

Range edit

 
Native range of steelhead, the anadromous form of O. mykiss

The native range of Oncorhynchus mykiss is in the coastal waters and tributary streams of the Pacific basin, from the Kamchatka Peninsula in Russia, east along the Aleutian Islands, throughout southwest Alaska, the Pacific coast of British Columbia and southeast Alaska, and south along the west coast of the U.S. to northern Mexico. It is claimed that the Mexican forms of Oncorhynchus mykiss represent the southernmost native range of any trout or salmon (Salmonidae),[43] though the Formosan landlocked salmon (O. masou formosanus) in Asia inhabits a similar latitude. The range of coastal rainbow trout (O. m. irideus) extends north from the Pacific basin into tributaries of the Bering Sea in northwest Alaska, while forms of the Columbia River redband trout (O. m. gairdneri) extend east into the upper Mackenzie River and Peace River watersheds in British Columbia and Alberta, Canada, which eventually drain into the Beaufort Sea, part of the Arctic Ocean.[44] Since 1875, the rainbow trout has been widely introduced into suitable lacustrine and riverine environments throughout the United States and around the world. Many of these introductions have established wild, self-sustaining populations.[45]

Artificial propagation edit

 
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service fish hatchery

Since 1870, rainbow trout have been artificially propagated in fish hatcheries to restock streams and introduce them into non-native waters. The first rainbow trout hatchery was established on San Leandro Creek, a tributary of San Francisco Bay, in 1870, and trout production began in 1871. The hatchery was stocked with the locally native rainbow trout, and likely steelhead of the coastal rainbow trout subspecies (O. m. irideus). The fish raised in this hatchery were shipped to hatcheries out of state for the first time in 1875, to Caledonia, New York, and then in 1876 to Northville, Michigan. In 1877, another California rainbow trout hatchery, the first federal fish hatchery in the National Fish Hatchery System, was established on Campbell Creek, a McCloud River tributary.[46] The McCloud River hatchery indiscriminately mixed coastal rainbow trout eggs with the eggs of local McCloud River redband trout (O. m. stonei). Eggs from the McCloud hatchery were also provided to the San Leandro hatchery, thus making the origin and genetic history of hatchery-bred rainbow trout somewhat diverse and complex.[47] In the U.S., there are hundreds of hatcheries operated by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and various state agencies and tribal governments propagating rainbow trout for conservation and recreational sport fishing.[48][49][50][51] Six of ten Canadian provinces have rainbow trout farms, with Ontario leading production.[52]

Aquaculture edit

 
Rainbow trout, cleaned and iced, in a fish market in Western Australia

Rainbow trout are commercially farmed in many countries throughout the world. The practice began in the late 19th century,[53] and since the 1950s commercial production has grown dramatically.[54] Worldwide, in 2007, 604,695 tonnes (666,562 short tons) of farmed rainbow trout were harvested with a value of about US$2.6 billion.[54] The largest producer is Chile. In Chile and Norway, sea cage production of steelhead has expanded to supply export markets. Inland production of rainbow trout to supply domestic markets has increased in countries such as Italy, France, Germany, Denmark, and Spain. Other significant trout-producing countries include the U.S., Iran, the United Kingdom,[54] and Lesotho.[55] While the U.S. rainbow trout industry as a whole is viewed as ecologically responsible,[56] trout raised elsewhere are not necessarily farmed with the same methods.[53]

About three-quarters of U.S. production comes from Idaho, particularly the Snake River area,[53] due in part to the quality and temperature of the water available there.[57] California and Washington also produce significant numbers of farmed trout. In the east, Pennsylvania, North Carolina and West Virginia have farming operations.[53][58] Rainbow trout farming is one of the largest finfish aquaculture industries in the U.S.[53] They are raised inland in facilities where raceways or ponds have continuously flowing water with little pollution and a low risk of escape. The U.S. industry is noted for using best management practices.[56] Imports constitute only about 15 percent of farmed rainbows sold in the U.S., and nearly all domestic production is consumed within the country; very little is exported. The U.S. produces about 7 percent of the world's farmed trout.[53] Rainbow trout, especially those raised in farms and hatcheries, are susceptible to enteric redmouth disease. A considerable amount of research has been conducted on redmouth disease, given its serious implications for rainbow trout farming. The disease does not infect humans.[59]

There have been recent interest and efforts in introducing a rainbow trout species that can be completely fed on a vegan diet through genetic selection. Research from a study team led by USDA research geneticist Dr. Ken Overturf concluded that such natural genetic variation of vegan trouts does exist and believe they can produce rainbow trouts that can be completely fed on a 100% plant-based diet.[60]

Conservation edit

 
U.S. range map for O. mykiss; native (light brown) and introduced (dark brown and pink)[61]

Populations of many rainbow trout subspecies, including anadromous forms (steelhead) of O. m. irideus (coastal rainbow trout) and O. m. gairdneri (Columbia River redband trout), have declined in their native ranges due to over-harvest, habitat loss, disease, invasive species, pollution and hybridization with other subspecies, and some introduced populations, once healthy, have declined for the same reasons. As a consequence, some rainbow populations, particularly anadromous forms within their native range, have been classified as endangered, threatened or species of special concern by federal or state agencies.[62] Rainbow trout, and subspecies thereof, are currently a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency-approved indicator species for acute freshwater toxicity testing.[63]

Many non-profit organizations have formed to protect, conserve and restore native rainbow trout and steelhead populations. Generally, in partnership with various universities, state, federal and tribal agencies, and private interests, these organizations sponsor projects to restore habitat, prevent habitat loss and promote awareness of threats to native trout populations.

 
Two pairs of steelhead spawning in the lower reaches of Stevens Creek in Mountain View, California, in 2013

Trout Unlimited (TU) is a non-profit organization dedicated to the conservation of North American freshwater streams, rivers, and associated upland habitats for trout, salmon, other aquatic species, and people.[64] A typical TU project is the Circle Creek Fish Passage Project, in which access to a spawning stream is being improved for steelhead and other salmonid species.[65] The Wild Salmon Center, an international coalition of Russian, Canadian and U.S. scientists, sponsors the Kamchatka Steelhead Project, a 20-year (1994–2014) scientific program to study and conserve the present condition of Kamchatkan steelhead ("mikizha"), a species listed in the Red Data Book of Russia.[66] Other high-profile organizations involved in rainbow trout conservation include California Trout, which protects wild trout and other salmonids in the waters of California.[67] The Steelhead Society of British Columbia promotes the wellbeing of wild salmonids in British Columbia.[68] In 1997, a group of approximately 40 ichthyologists, biologists and naturalists from several U.S. and Mexican institutions formed a collaborative group—Truchas Mexicanas—to study the diversity of Mexican native trout, most of which are considered subspecies of O. mykiss.[69]

Hybridization and habitat loss edit

Rainbow trout, primarily hatchery-raised fish of the coastal rainbow trout subspecies (O. m. irideus) introduced into waters inhabited with cutthroat trout, will breed with cutthroats and produce fertile hybrids called cutbows.[70] In the case of the westslope cutthroat trout (O. clarki lewisi), hybridization with introduced rainbow and Yellowstone cutthroat trout (O. clarki bouvieri) is threatening the westslope cutthroat trout with genomic extinction.[71] Such introductions into the ranges of redband trout (O. m. gairdneri, newberrii, and stonei) have severely reduced the range of pure stocks of these subspecies, making them "species of concern" in their respective ranges.[72]

Within the range of the Kern River golden trout of Southern California, hatchery-bred rainbows introduced into the Kern River have diluted the genetic purity of the Kern River rainbow trout (O. m. gilberti) and golden trout (O. m. aguabonita) through intraspecific breeding.[73][74][75] The Beardslee trout (O. m. irideus var. beardsleei), a genetically unique lake-dwelling variety of the coastal rainbow trout that is isolated in Lake Crescent (Washington), is threatened by the loss of its only spawning grounds in the Lyre River to siltation and other types of habitat degradation.[11]

Invasive species and disease edit

Whirling disease edit

Myxobolus cerebralis is a myxosporean parasite of salmonids (salmon, trout, and their allies) that causes whirling disease in pen farmed salmon and trout and also in wild fish populations.[76] It was first described in rainbow trout introduced to Germany a century ago, but its range has spread and it has appeared in most of Europe, northern Asia, the U.S., South Africa[77] and other countries.[78] In the 1980s, M. cerebralis was found to require Tubifex tubifex (a kind of segmented worm) to complete its life cycle. The parasite infects its hosts with its cells after piercing them with polar filaments ejected from nematocyst-like capsules.[79]

 
M. cerebralis has been reported in Germany (1893), Italy (1954), USSR (1955), including Sakhalin Island (1960), U.S. (1958), Bulgaria (1960), Yugoslavia (1960), Sweden (1966), South Africa (1966), Scotland (1968), New Zealand (1971), Ecuador (1971), Norway (1971), Colombia (1972), Lebanon (1973), Ireland (1974), Spain (1981) and England (1981).

This parasite was originally a mild pathogen of brown trout in central Europe and other salmonids in northeast Asia, and the spread of the rainbow trout has greatly increased its impact. Having no innate immunity to M. cerebralis, rainbow trout are particularly susceptible, and can release so many spores that even more resistant species in the same area, such as Salmo trutta, can become overloaded with parasites and incur mortalities of 80 to 90 percent. Where M. cerebralis has become well-established, it has caused a decline or even elimination of whole cohorts of fish.[80][81]

The parasite M. cerebralis was first recorded in North America in 1956 in Pennsylvania,[79] but until the 1990s, whirling disease was considered a manageable problem affecting only rainbow trout in hatcheries. It eventually became established in the natural waters of the Rocky Mountain states (Colorado, Wyoming, Utah, Montana, Idaho, New Mexico), where it is damaging several sport fishing rivers. Some streams in the western U.S. lost 90 percent of their trout.[82] Whirling disease threatens recreational fishing, which is important for the tourism industry, a key component of the economies of some U.S. western states. For example, in 2005 anglers in Montana spent approximately $196,000,000 in activities directly related to trout fishing in the state.[83] Some of the salmonids that M. cerebralis infects (bull trout, cutthroat trout, and anadromous forms of rainbow trout—steelhead) are already threatened or endangered, and the parasite could worsen their population decline.[84]

New Zealand mud snail edit

 
Distribution of New Zealand mud snail within the U.S. in 2009

The New Zealand mud snail (Potamopyrgus antipodarum), once endemic to New Zealand, has spread widely and has become naturalised and an invasive species in many areas including Australia,[85] Asia (Japan,[86] in the Garmat Ali River in Iraq since 2008[87]), Europe (since 1859 in England), and North America (U.S. and Canada: Thunder Bay in Ontario since 2001, British Columbia since July 2007[86]), most likely inadvertently during human activity.[88] It can reach concentrations greater than 500,000 per square metre (46,000/sq ft), endangering the food chain by outcompeting native snails and water insects for food, leading to sharp declines in native populations.[89] There is evidence North American fishes are unable to digest the tiny but hard shells of the mud snail, and that their presence may result in poor growth outcomes for rainbow trout.[90]

The mud snail was first detected in the U.S. in Idaho's Snake River in 1987. Since then, the snail has spread to the Madison River, Firehole River, and other watercourses around Yellowstone National Park, and has been discovered throughout the western U.S.[88] The exact means of transmission is unknown, but it is likely that it was introduced in water transferred with live game fish and has been spread by ship ballast or contaminated recreational equipment such as wading gear.[91]

Didymo edit

Didymosphenia geminata, commonly known as didymo or rock snot, is a species of diatom that produces nuisance growths in freshwater rivers and streams with consistently cold water temperatures.[92] In New Zealand, invasive didymo can form large mats on the bottom of rivers and streams in late winter. It is not considered a significant human health risk, but it can affect stream habitats and sources of food for fish, including rainbow trout, and make recreational activities unpleasant.[93] Even though it is native in North America, it is considered a nuisance organism or invasive species.[94]

Redmouth disease edit

Enteric redmouth disease is a bacterial infection of freshwater and marine fish caused by the pathogen Yersinia ruckeri. It is primarily found in rainbow trout and other cultured salmonids. The disease is characterized by subcutaneous hemorrhaging of the mouth, fins, and eyes. It is most commonly seen in fish farms with poor water quality. Redmouth disease was first discovered in Idaho rainbow trout in the 1950s.[95]

Removal methods edit

Some fisheries are focused on removing rainbow trout in order to reestablish native trout populations. This can be done by poisoning rivers with chemicals such as antimycin or rotenone which have been declared safe in the U.S. by the Environmental Protection Agency. Once the chemicals have dissipated, native trout are released into the river. Another method is to use electrofishing which enables the fish to be caught alive and harvested or re-located. This technique has been used in the Great Smokey Mountains National Park to rid it of rainbow trout that were introduced in the 1930s and have thrived ever since. They are hoping to re-establish native brook trout in at least some of the 3,400 km (2,100 mi) river system.[96] Neither method of control is 100% effective and are best regarded as methods to change the relative population sizes of fish species.

Steelhead declines edit

 
A large Steelhead caught on the Zymoetz (Copper) River in British Columbia

Steelhead populations in parts of its native range have declined due to a variety of human and natural causes. While populations in Alaska and along the British Columbia coast are considered healthy, populations in Kamchatka and some populations along the U.S. West Coast are in decline. The U.S. National Marine Fisheries Service has 15 identified distinct population segments, in Washington, Oregon, and California. Eleven of these populations are listed under the U.S. Endangered Species Act, ten as threatened and one as endangered.[97] One distinct population segment on the Oregon coast is designated a U.S. Species of Concern.[97][98]

The Southern California distinct population segment, which was listed as endangered in 2011, has been affected by habitat loss due to dams, confinement of streams in concrete channels, water pollution, groundwater pumping, urban heat island effects, and other byproducts of urbanization.[99] Steelhead in the Kamchatka Peninsula are threatened by over-harvest, particularly from poaching and potential development, and are listed in the Red Data Book of Russia that documents rare and endangered species.[100]

Hatchery stocking influence edit

 
Steelhead hatchery broodstock inspection

Several studies have shown that almost all California coastal steelhead are of native origin, despite over a century of hatchery stocking. Genetic analysis shows that the South Central California Coast and Southern California populations from Malibu Creek north, including the San Gabriel River, Santa Ana River, and San Mateo Creek, are not hatchery strains. Steelhead from Topanga Creek and the Sweetwater River were partly, and those from San Juan Creek completely, of hatchery origin.[101] Genetic analysis has also shown that the steelhead in the streams of the Santa Clara County and Monterey Bay basins are not of hatchery origin, including the Coyote Creek, Guadalupe River, Pajaro River, Permanente Creek, Stevens Creek, San Francisquito Creek, San Lorenzo River, and San Tomas Aquino Creek basins.[102] Natural waterfalls and two major dams have isolated Russian River steelhead from freshwater rainbow trout forms above the impassable barriers; a 2007 genetic study of fin samples collected from steelhead at 20 different sites both above and below passage barriers in the watershed found that although 30 million hatchery trout were stocked in the river from 1911 to 1925, the steelhead remain of native and not hatchery origin.[103]

Releases of conventionally reared hatchery steelhead pose ecological risks to wild steelhead populations. Hatchery steelhead are typically larger than the wild forms and can displace wild-form juveniles from optimal habitats. The dominance of hatchery steelhead for optimal microhabitats within streams may reduce wild steelhead survival as a result of reduced foraging opportunities and increased rates of predation.[104]

Uses edit

Fishing edit

 
Rainbow trout are a popular game fish for fly fishers.

Rainbow trout and steelhead are highly regarded game fish among anglers. Rainbow trout are a popular target for fly fishers, and several lure fishing methods are used. The use of lures presented via spinning, casting, or trolling techniques is common. Rainbow trout can also be caught on various live and dead natural baits. Many anglers consider the rainbow trout the hardest-fighting trout species, as this fish is known for leaping when hooked and putting up a powerful struggle.[105] It is considered one of the top five sport fish in North America, and the most important game fish west of the Rocky Mountains.[27]

There are tribal commercial fisheries for steelhead in Puget Sound, the Washington coast, and in the Columbia River, but there has been controversy regarding overharvesting of native stocks.[106]

The highly desirable sporting qualities and adaptability of the rainbow trout to hatchery rearing and new habitats resulted in it being introduced to many countries around the world by or at the behest of sport fishermen. Many of these introductions have resulted in environmental and ecological problems, as the introduced rainbow trout disrupt local ecosystems and outcompete or prey upon indigenous fishes.[107] Other introductions to support sport angling in waters either devoid of fish or with seriously depleted native stocks have created world-class fisheries such as in the Firehole River in Yellowstone National Park[108][109][110] and in the Great Lakes.[111]

Record edit

The International Game Fish Association recognizes the world record for rainbow trout as a fish caught on Saskatchewan's Lake Diefenbaker by Sean Konrad on September 5, 2009, which weighed 48 lb (22 kg). The record is controversial because the fish was a genetically modified triploid and was part of a large number of triploid rainbow trout which escaped from an aquaculture facility.[112]

As food edit

 
Rainbow trout and potatoes

Rainbow trout is popular in Western cuisine; both wild-caught and farmed fish are eaten. It has tender flesh and a mild, somewhat nutty flavor.[58] Wild fish has a stronger, gamier taste than farmed fish.[57] While the taste of wild-caught trout is often promoted as superior,[113] rainbow trout and "steelhead" sold in American restaurants is typically farmed.[113] Farmed rainbow trout are considered one of the safest fish to eat and are noted for high levels of vitamin B and a generally appealing flavor.[114] Seafood Watch ranks farmed rainbow trout as a "Best Choice" fish for human consumption.[53] In Montana, it is illegal to sell or market wild-caught rainbow trout,[115][116] which are legally classified as game fish.[117]

The color and flavor of the flesh depend on the diet and freshness of the trout. Farmed trout and some populations of wild trout, especially anadromous steelhead, have reddish or orange flesh as a result of high astaxanthin levels in their diets. Astaxanthin is a powerful antioxidant that may be from a natural source or a synthetic trout feed. Rainbow trout raised to have pinker flesh from a diet high in astaxanthin are sometimes sold in the U.S. with labeling calling them "steelhead".[58] As wild steelhead are in decline in some parts of their range, farmed rainbow trout are viewed as a preferred alternative.[56] In Chile and Norway, rainbow trout farmed in saltwater sea cages are sold labeled as steelhead.[53]

Trout can be cooked as soon as they are cleaned, without scaling, skinning, or filleting.[113] If cooked with the skin on, the meat tends to hold together better.[58] While trout sold commercially in Europe is often prepared and served this way, most trout sold commercially in the United States have the fish heads removed and have been fully or partially deboned and filleted. Medium to heavy-bodied white wines, such as chardonnay, sauvignon blanc, or pinot gris, are typical wine pairings for trout.[118]

In Mainland China since 2018, it was ruled by an industrial association that rainbow trout can be labelled and sold as salmon.[119][120][121]

Water purification edit

 
Rainbow trout in a water purification facility

Rainbow trout is sometimes used as a biological indicator for water quality in water purification facilities.[122]

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  111. ^ . New York State Department of Environmental Conservation. Archived from the original on 2021-06-09. Retrieved 2013-11-28.
  112. ^ Keim, Brandon (2009-09-15). "48-Pound Trout: World Record or Genetic Cheat?". Wired. Retrieved 2013-11-29.
  113. ^ a b c Wright, Leonard M. (1996). Trout Maverick. New York: Lyons & Burford. p. 19. ISBN 978-1-55821-476-7.
  114. ^ Cancila, Katherine (2010-09-16). "The 5 Safest Fish to Eat – Salmon, Tilapia, Rainbow Trout, and More". Babble. Disney. Retrieved 2014-01-06.
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  119. ^ "Rainbow trout can now be called salmon in China". BBC News. August 14, 2018.
  120. ^ "China rules rainbow trout can now be sold as salmon, in attempt to reduce counterfeit fish sales". The Independent. August 14, 2018.
  121. ^ "Very fishy: China rules rainbow trout can be sold as salmon". The Guardian. August 14, 2018.
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Further reading edit

  • Combs, Trey (1976). Steelhead Fly Fishing and Flies. Portland, Oregon: Frank Amato. ISBN 978-0-936608-03-7.
  • Combs, Trey (1991). Steelhead Fly Fishing. New York: Lyons and Burford Publishers. ISBN 978-1-55821-119-3.
  • Gerlach, Rex (1988). Fly Fishing for Rainbows-Strategies and tactics for North America's Favorite Trout. Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania: Stackpole Books. ISBN 978-0-8117-0624-7.
  • Halverson, Anders (2010). An Entirely Synthetic Fish: How Rainbow Trout Beguiled America and Overran the World. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-14088-0. OCLC 440281085. Review,
  • Marshall, Mel (1973). Steelhead. New York: Winchester Press. ISBN 978-0-87691-093-1.
  • McClane, A. J.; Gardner, Keith (1984). "Rainbow Trout and Steelhead". McClane's Game Fish of North America. New York: Times Books. pp. 54–93. ISBN 978-0-8129-1134-3.
  • McDermand, Charles (1946). Waters of the Golden Trout Country. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons.
  • Montaigne, Fen (1998). "Kamchatka". Reeling in Russia. New York: St. Martins Press. pp. 251–270. ISBN 978-0-312-18595-4.
  • Scott and Crossman (1985) Freshwater Fishes of Canada. Bulletin 184. Fisheries Research Board of Canada. Page 189. ISBN 0-660-10239-0
  • Walden, Howard T. 2nd (1964). "Rainbow, Cutthroat, and Golden Trout". Familiar Freshwater Fishes of America. New York: Harper & Row, Publishers. pp. 14–33.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)

External links edit

  •   Media related to Oncorhynchus mykiss at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Data related to Oncorhynchus mykiss at Wikispecies
  • Froese, Rainer; Pauly, Daniel (eds.) (2006). "Oncorhynchus mykiss" in FishBase. February 2006 version.
  • "Oncorhynchus mykiss". Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved 2006-01-30.

rainbow, trout, rainbow, trout, oncorhynchus, mykiss, species, trout, native, cold, water, tributaries, pacific, ocean, asia, north, america, steelhead, sometimes, called, steelhead, trout, anadromous, form, coastal, rainbow, trout, irideus, columbia, river, r. The rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss is a species of trout native to cold water tributaries of the Pacific Ocean in Asia and North America The steelhead sometimes called steelhead trout is an anadromous sea run form of the coastal rainbow trout O m irideus or Columbia River redband trout O m gairdneri that usually returns to freshwater to spawn after living two to three years in the ocean Freshwater forms that have been introduced into the Great Lakes and migrate into tributaries to spawn are also called steelhead Rainbow troutAdult rainbow troutConservation statusSecure NatureServe 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass ActinopterygiiOrder SalmoniformesFamily SalmonidaeGenus OncorhynchusSpecies O mykissBinomial nameOncorhynchus mykiss Walbaum 1792 Synonyms 2 previous scientific names Salmo mykiss Walbaum 1792 Parasalmo mykiss Walbaum 1792 Salmo purpuratus Pallas 1814 Salmo penshinensis Pallas 1814 Parasalmo penshinensis Pallas 1814 Salmo gairdnerii Richardson 1836 Fario gairdneri Richardson 1836 Oncorhynchus gairdnerii Richardson 1836 Salmo gairdnerii gairdnerii Richardson 1836 Salmo rivularis Ayres 1855 Salmo iridea Gibbons 1855 Salmo gairdnerii irideus Gibbons 1855 Salmo irideus Gibbons 1855 Trutta iridea Gibbons 1855 Salmo truncatus Suckley 1859 Salmo masoni Suckley 1860 Oncorhynchus kamloops Jordan 1892 Salmo kamloops Jordan 1892 Salmo rivularis kamloops Jordan 1892 Salmo gairdneri shasta Jordan 1894 Salmo gilberti Jordan 1894 Salmo nelsoni Evermann 1908Adult freshwater stream rainbow trout average between 0 5 and 2 5 kilograms 1 and 5 lb while lake dwelling and anadromous forms may reach 9 kg 20 lb Coloration varies widely based on subspecies forms and habitat Adult fish are distinguished by a broad reddish stripe along the lateral line from gills to the tail which is most vivid in breeding males Wild caught and hatchery reared forms of the species have been transplanted and introduced for food or sport in at least 45 countries and every continent except Antarctica Introductions to locations outside their native range in the United States Southern Europe Australia New Zealand and South America have damaged native fish species Introduced populations may affect native species by preying on them out competing them transmitting contagious diseases such as whirling disease or hybridizing with closely related species and subspecies The rainbow trout is included in the list of the top 100 globally invasive species Other introductions into waters previously devoid of fish or with severely depleted stocks of native fish have created sport fisheries such as the Great Lakes and Wyoming s Firehole River Some local populations of specific subspecies or in the case of steelhead distinct population segments are listed as either threatened or endangered under the Endangered Species Act The steelhead is the official state fish of Washington 3 Contents 1 Taxonomy 1 1 Subspecies 2 Description 3 Life cycle 3 1 Freshwater life cycle 3 2 Steelhead life cycle 3 3 Growth and oxidative stress on mitochondria 4 Feeding 5 Range 6 Artificial propagation 6 1 Aquaculture 7 Conservation 7 1 Hybridization and habitat loss 7 2 Invasive species and disease 7 2 1 Whirling disease 7 2 2 New Zealand mud snail 7 2 3 Didymo 7 2 4 Redmouth disease 7 3 Removal methods 7 4 Steelhead declines 7 4 1 Hatchery stocking influence 8 Uses 8 1 Fishing 8 1 1 Record 8 2 As food 8 3 Water purification 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksTaxonomy editThe scientific name of the rainbow trout is Oncorhynchus mykiss 4 The species was originally named by German naturalist and taxonomist Johann Julius Walbaum in 1792 based on type specimens from the Kamchatka Peninsula in Siberia Walbaum s original species name mykiss was derived from the local Kamchatkan name used for the fish mykizha The name of the genus is from the Greek ὄgkos onkos lump bend hook and ῥygxos rhunkhos snout in reference to the hooked jaws of males in the mating season the kype 5 Sir John Richardson a Scottish naturalist named a specimen of this species Salmo gairdneri in 1836 to honor Meredith Gairdner a Hudson s Bay Company surgeon at Fort Vancouver on the Columbia River who provided Richardson with specimens 6 In 1855 William P Gibbons the curator of Geology and Mineralogy 7 at the California Academy of Sciences found a population and named it Salmo iridia Latin rainbow later corrected to Salmo irideus These names faded once it was determined that Walbaum s description of type specimens was conspecific and therefore had precedence 8 In 1989 morphological and genetic studies indicated that trout of the Pacific Basin were genetically closer to Pacific salmon Oncorhynchus species than to the Salmos brown trout Salmo trutta or Atlantic salmon Salmo salar of the Atlantic Basin 9 Thus in 1989 taxonomic authorities moved the rainbow cutthroat and other Pacific Basin trout into the genus Oncorhynchus 5 Walbaum s name had precedence so the species name Oncorhynchus mykiss became the scientific name of the rainbow trout The previous species names irideus and gairdneri were adopted as subspecies names for the coastal rainbow and Columbia River redband trout respectively 5 Anadromous forms of the coastal rainbow trout O m irideus or Columbia River redband trout O m gairdneri are commonly known as steelhead 4 Subspecies edit Subspecies of Oncorhynchus mykiss are listed below as described by fisheries biologist Robert J Behnke 2002 10 Geographical group Common name Scientific name Range ImageType subspecies Kamchatkan rainbow trout O m mykiss Walbaum 1792 Western Pacific the Kamchatka Peninsula and has been recorded from the Commander Islands east of Kamchatka and sporadically in the Sea of Okhotsk as far south as the mouth of the Amur RiverCoastal forms Coastal rainbow trout O m irideus Gibbons 1855 Pacific Ocean tributaries from Aleutian Islands in Alaska south to Southern California Anadromous forms are known as steelhead freshwater forms as rainbow trout nbsp nbsp Ocean a k a steelhead and fresh water forms of coastal rainbow troutO m irideusBeardslee trout O m irideus var beardsleei not a true subspecies but a genetically unique lake dwelling variety of the coastal rainbow trout Jordan 1896 11 Isolated in Lake Crescent WashingtonRedband forms Columbia River redband trout O m gairdneri Richardson 1836 Found in the Columbia River and its tributaries in Montana Washington and Idaho Anadromous forms are known as redband steelhead nbsp Columbia River redband troutO m gairdneriAthabasca rainbow trout O m spp considered by Behnke as a form of O m gairdneri but considered a separate subspecies by biologist L M Carl of the Ontario Ministry of Resources Aquatic Ecosystems Research Section and associates from work published in 1994 12 Distributed throughout the headwaters of the Athabasca River system in AlbertaMcCloud River redband trout O m stonei Jordan 1894 Native to the McCloud River upstream of Middle Falls and its tributaries in Northern California south of Mount Shasta Sheepheaven Creek redband trout O m spp Native to Sheepheaven Creek Siskiyou County California Sheepheaven Creek redband were transplanted into Swamp Creek in 1972 and 1974 and into Trout Creek in 1977 Great Basin redband trout O m newberrii Girard 1859 Native in southeastern Oregon and parts of California and Nevada on the periphery of the Great Basin Eagle Lake trout O m aquilarum Snyder 1917 Endemic to Eagle Lake in Lassen County California Kamloops rainbow trout O m kamloops strain Jordan 1892 Native to several large British Columbia lakes particularly Kamloops Lake and Kootenay Lake Known for its very large size Kern River golden trout Golden trout O m aguabonita Jordan 1892 Native to Golden Trout Creek tributary to the Kern River Volcano Creek tributary to Golden Trout Creek and the South Fork Kern River nbsp Kern River golden troutO m aguabonitaKern River rainbow trout O m gilberti Jordan 1894 Endemic to the Kern River and tributaries in Tulare County California Its current range is drastically reduced from its historic range Remnant populations live in the Kern River above Durrwood Creek in upper Ninemile Rattlesnake and Osa creeks and possibly in upper Peppermint Creek Little Kern golden trout O m whitei Evermann 1906 Endemic to about 160 kilometres 100 mi of the Little Kern River and tributaries of Tulare County California Their current range is restricted to five headwater streams in the Kern River basin Wet Meadows Deadman Soda Spring Willow Sheep and Fish creeks plus an introduced population in Coyote Creek a tributary of the Kern River 13 Mexican forms Mexican rainbow trout Rio Yaqui Rio Mayo and Guzman trout Rio San Lorenzo and Arroyo la Sidra trout Rio del Presidio trout O m nelsoni Evermann 1908 Sometimes referred to as Nelson s trout occurs in three distinct geographic groups The taxonomy of these trout is subject to ongoing research and there may be significant diversity of forms in this group 14 Mutated forms Golden rainbow troutorPalomino trout So called golden rainbow trout or palomino trout are bred from a single mutated color variant of O mykiss that originated in a West Virginia fish hatchery in 1955 15 16 They are also known as banana trout It is stocked outside of West Virginia but West Virginia still stocks 50 000 palominos a year 17 The golden rainbow trout is predominantly yellowish lacking the typical green field and black spots but retaining the diffuse red stripe 16 The palomino trout is a mixture of golden and common rainbow trout resulting in an intermediate color The golden rainbow trout is not the same subspecies as the naturally occurring O m aguabonita the Kern River golden trout of California 16 nbsp Golden rainbow trout 18 Description editResident freshwater rainbow trout adults average between 0 5 and 2 5 kg 1 and 5 lb in riverine environments while lake dwelling and anadromous forms may reach 9 kg 20 lb Coloration varies widely between regions and subspecies Adult freshwater forms are generally blue green or olive green with heavy black spotting over the length of the body Adult fish have a broad reddish stripe along the lateral line from gills to the tail which is most pronounced in breeding males 10 The caudal fin is squarish and only mildly forked Lake dwelling and anadromous forms are usually more silvery in color with the reddish stripe almost completely gone Juvenile rainbow trout display parr marks dark vertical bars typical of most salmonid juveniles In some redband and golden trout forms parr marks are typically retained into adulthood 19 Some coastal rainbow trout O m irideus and Columbia River redband trout O m gairdneri populations and cutbow hybrids may also display reddish or pink throat markings similar to cutthroat trout 20 In many regions hatchery bred trout can be distinguished from native trout via fin clips 21 Fin clipping the adipose fin is a management tool used to identify hatchery reared fish 22 Life cycle editRainbow trout including steelhead forms generally spawn in early to late spring January to June in the Northern Hemisphere and September to November in the Southern Hemisphere when water temperatures reach at least 6 to 7 C 42 to 44 F 23 The maximum recorded lifespan for a rainbow trout is 11 years 24 Freshwater life cycle edit nbsp Spawning steelhead nbsp Eggs in gravel and rainbow trout alevin nbsp Typical juvenile rainbow trout showing parr marks nbsp Typical adult rainbow trout Freshwater resident rainbow trout usually inhabit and spawn in small to moderately large well oxygenated shallow rivers with gravel bottoms They are native to the alluvial or freestone streams that are typical tributaries of the Pacific basin but introduced rainbow trout have established wild self sustaining populations in other river types such as bedrock and spring creeks Lake resident rainbow trout are usually found in moderately deep cool lakes with adequate shallows and vegetation to support the production of sufficient food sources Lake populations generally require access to gravelly bottomed streams to be self sustaining 25 Spawning sites are usually a bed of fine gravel in a riffle above a pool A female trout clears a redd in the gravel by turning on her side and beating her tail up and down Female rainbow trout usually produce 2000 to 3000 4 to 5 millimetre 5 32 3 16 in eggs per kilogram of weight 26 During spawning the eggs fall into spaces between the gravel and immediately the female begins digging at the upstream edge of the nest covering the eggs with the displaced gravel As eggs are released by the female a male moves alongside and deposits milt sperm over the eggs to fertilize them The eggs usually hatch in about four to seven weeks although the time of hatching varies greatly with region and habitat Newly hatched trout are called sac fry or alevin In approximately two weeks the yolk sac is completely consumed and fry commence feeding mainly on zooplankton The growth rate of rainbow trout varies with area habitat life history and quality and quantity of food 27 As fry grow they begin to develop parr marks or dark vertical bars on their sides In this juvenile stage immature trout are often called parr because of the marks These small juvenile trout are sometimes called fingerlings because they are approximately the size of a human finger In streams where rainbow trout are stocked for sport fishing but no natural reproduction occurs some of the stocked trout may survive and grow or carryover for several seasons before they are caught or perish 28 nbsp Steelhead from Lake Erie nbsp Male ocean phase steelhead nbsp Male spawning phase steelhead Steelhead life cycle edit See also Salmon run and Steelhead The oceangoing anadromous form including those returning for spawning are known as steelhead in Canada and the U S 29 In Tasmania they are commercially propagated in sea cages and are known as ocean trout although they are the same species 30 Like salmon steelhead return to their original hatching grounds to spawn Similar to Atlantic salmon but unlike their Pacific Oncorhynchus salmonid kin steelhead are iteroparous able to spawn several times each time separated by months and make several spawning trips between fresh and salt water although fewer than 10 percent of native spawning adults survive from one spawning to another 31 The survival rate for introduced populations in the Great Lakes is as high as 70 percent As young steelhead transition from freshwater to saltwater a process called smoltification occurs where the trout undergoes physiological changes to allow it to survive in seawater 32 There are genetic differences between freshwater and steelhead populations that may account for the smoltification in steelhead 33 Juvenile steelhead may remain in the river for one to three years before smolting and migrating to sea Individual steelhead populations leave the ocean and migrate into their freshwater spawning tributaries at different times of the year Two general forms exist summer run steelhead and winter run steelhead Summer run fish leave the ocean between May and October before their reproductive organs are fully mature They mature in freshwater while en route to spawning grounds where they spawn in the spring Summer run fish generally spawn in longer more inland rivers such as the Columbia River Winter run fish are ready to spawn when they leave the ocean typically between November and April and spawn shortly after returning to fresh water Winter run fish generally spawn in shorter coastal rivers typically found along the Olympic Peninsula and British Columbia coastline 23 and summer run fish are found in some shorter coastal streams 34 Once steelhead enter riverine systems and reach suitable spawning grounds they spawn just like resident freshwater rainbow trout 23 Growth and oxidative stress on mitochondria editDuring periods of rapid growth and aging trout display high levels of metabolic activity High metabolic activity has been correlated with increased levels of oxidative stress 35 36 and decreased machinery repair 37 in rainbow trout During high oxidative stress the mitochondria are the most important organelle contributing to tissue damage because of their role in metabolism and production of reactive oxygen species In a study done by Almaida Pagan et al 38 researchers identified changes to the heart and brain mitochondrial membrane phospholipid composition in rainbow trout due to the differing levels of oxidative stress each organ faced during a high stress time such as rapid growth and development Stock rainbow trout of ages 1 2 and 4 years had their heart and brain mitochondria isolated and analyzed for fatty acid composition The tissues showed an overall similar percentage of total phospholipids but differed in the types and proportions of phospholipids With age the heart showed more unsaturated phospholipids which are more susceptible to peroxidation and thus damage The brain mitochondria of rainbow trout show decreased levels of docosahexaenoic acid and a lower peroxidation index suggesting a lower susceptibility to damage by oxidative stress and a different reaction to growth compared to heart mitochondria During the trout s development into an adult a time of intense growth the mitochondrial membrane composition and fluidity changes which can cause defects in the electron transport chain These defects combined with altered machinery repair and reactive oxygen species may cause more detrimental effects on the mitochondria in the fish as it matures Feeding editRainbow trout are predators with a varied diet and will eat nearly anything they can capture They are not as piscivorous or aggressive as brown trout or chars Rainbow trout including juvenile steelhead in fresh water routinely feed on larval pupal and adult forms of aquatic insects typically caddisflies stoneflies mayflies and aquatic diptera They also eat fish eggs and adult forms of terrestrial insects typically ants beetles grasshoppers and crickets that fall into the water as well as algae 39 Other prey includes small fish up to one third of their length crayfish shrimp and other crustaceans As rainbow trout grow the proportion of fish consumed increases in most populations Some lake dwelling forms may become planktonic feeders In rivers and streams populated with other salmonid species rainbow trout eat varied fish eggs including those of salmon brown and cutthroat trout mountain whitefish and the eggs of other rainbow trout Rainbows also consume decomposing flesh from the carcasses of other fish They have even been observed to have consumed hatchling snakes such as the barred grass snake Natrix helvetica 40 Adult steelhead in the ocean feed primarily on other fish squid and amphipods 41 If food has proper amount of tryptophan it will affect positively for enzyme activity occurred inside body and immune genes So immune system and stress resistance of rainbow trout improve 42 Range edit nbsp Native range of steelhead the anadromous form of O mykissThe native range of Oncorhynchus mykiss is in the coastal waters and tributary streams of the Pacific basin from the Kamchatka Peninsula in Russia east along the Aleutian Islands throughout southwest Alaska the Pacific coast of British Columbia and southeast Alaska and south along the west coast of the U S to northern Mexico It is claimed that the Mexican forms of Oncorhynchus mykiss represent the southernmost native range of any trout or salmon Salmonidae 43 though the Formosan landlocked salmon O masou formosanus in Asia inhabits a similar latitude The range of coastal rainbow trout O m irideus extends north from the Pacific basin into tributaries of the Bering Sea in northwest Alaska while forms of the Columbia River redband trout O m gairdneri extend east into the upper Mackenzie River and Peace River watersheds in British Columbia and Alberta Canada which eventually drain into the Beaufort Sea part of the Arctic Ocean 44 Since 1875 the rainbow trout has been widely introduced into suitable lacustrine and riverine environments throughout the United States and around the world Many of these introductions have established wild self sustaining populations 45 Artificial propagation edit nbsp U S Fish and Wildlife Service fish hatcherySince 1870 rainbow trout have been artificially propagated in fish hatcheries to restock streams and introduce them into non native waters The first rainbow trout hatchery was established on San Leandro Creek a tributary of San Francisco Bay in 1870 and trout production began in 1871 The hatchery was stocked with the locally native rainbow trout and likely steelhead of the coastal rainbow trout subspecies O m irideus The fish raised in this hatchery were shipped to hatcheries out of state for the first time in 1875 to Caledonia New York and then in 1876 to Northville Michigan In 1877 another California rainbow trout hatchery the first federal fish hatchery in the National Fish Hatchery System was established on Campbell Creek a McCloud River tributary 46 The McCloud River hatchery indiscriminately mixed coastal rainbow trout eggs with the eggs of local McCloud River redband trout O m stonei Eggs from the McCloud hatchery were also provided to the San Leandro hatchery thus making the origin and genetic history of hatchery bred rainbow trout somewhat diverse and complex 47 In the U S there are hundreds of hatcheries operated by the U S Fish and Wildlife Service and various state agencies and tribal governments propagating rainbow trout for conservation and recreational sport fishing 48 49 50 51 Six of ten Canadian provinces have rainbow trout farms with Ontario leading production 52 Aquaculture edit See also Salmon in aquaculture nbsp Rainbow trout cleaned and iced in a fish market in Western AustraliaRainbow trout are commercially farmed in many countries throughout the world The practice began in the late 19th century 53 and since the 1950s commercial production has grown dramatically 54 Worldwide in 2007 604 695 tonnes 666 562 short tons of farmed rainbow trout were harvested with a value of about US 2 6 billion 54 The largest producer is Chile In Chile and Norway sea cage production of steelhead has expanded to supply export markets Inland production of rainbow trout to supply domestic markets has increased in countries such as Italy France Germany Denmark and Spain Other significant trout producing countries include the U S Iran the United Kingdom 54 and Lesotho 55 While the U S rainbow trout industry as a whole is viewed as ecologically responsible 56 trout raised elsewhere are not necessarily farmed with the same methods 53 About three quarters of U S production comes from Idaho particularly the Snake River area 53 due in part to the quality and temperature of the water available there 57 California and Washington also produce significant numbers of farmed trout In the east Pennsylvania North Carolina and West Virginia have farming operations 53 58 Rainbow trout farming is one of the largest finfish aquaculture industries in the U S 53 They are raised inland in facilities where raceways or ponds have continuously flowing water with little pollution and a low risk of escape The U S industry is noted for using best management practices 56 Imports constitute only about 15 percent of farmed rainbows sold in the U S and nearly all domestic production is consumed within the country very little is exported The U S produces about 7 percent of the world s farmed trout 53 Rainbow trout especially those raised in farms and hatcheries are susceptible to enteric redmouth disease A considerable amount of research has been conducted on redmouth disease given its serious implications for rainbow trout farming The disease does not infect humans 59 There have been recent interest and efforts in introducing a rainbow trout species that can be completely fed on a vegan diet through genetic selection Research from a study team led by USDA research geneticist Dr Ken Overturf concluded that such natural genetic variation of vegan trouts does exist and believe they can produce rainbow trouts that can be completely fed on a 100 plant based diet 60 Conservation edit nbsp U S range map for O mykiss native light brown and introduced dark brown and pink 61 Populations of many rainbow trout subspecies including anadromous forms steelhead of O m irideus coastal rainbow trout and O m gairdneri Columbia River redband trout have declined in their native ranges due to over harvest habitat loss disease invasive species pollution and hybridization with other subspecies and some introduced populations once healthy have declined for the same reasons As a consequence some rainbow populations particularly anadromous forms within their native range have been classified as endangered threatened or species of special concern by federal or state agencies 62 Rainbow trout and subspecies thereof are currently a U S Environmental Protection Agency approved indicator species for acute freshwater toxicity testing 63 Many non profit organizations have formed to protect conserve and restore native rainbow trout and steelhead populations Generally in partnership with various universities state federal and tribal agencies and private interests these organizations sponsor projects to restore habitat prevent habitat loss and promote awareness of threats to native trout populations nbsp Two pairs of steelhead spawning in the lower reaches of Stevens Creek in Mountain View California in 2013Trout Unlimited TU is a non profit organization dedicated to the conservation of North American freshwater streams rivers and associated upland habitats for trout salmon other aquatic species and people 64 A typical TU project is the Circle Creek Fish Passage Project in which access to a spawning stream is being improved for steelhead and other salmonid species 65 The Wild Salmon Center an international coalition of Russian Canadian and U S scientists sponsors the Kamchatka Steelhead Project a 20 year 1994 2014 scientific program to study and conserve the present condition of Kamchatkan steelhead mikizha a species listed in the Red Data Book of Russia 66 Other high profile organizations involved in rainbow trout conservation include California Trout which protects wild trout and other salmonids in the waters of California 67 The Steelhead Society of British Columbia promotes the wellbeing of wild salmonids in British Columbia 68 In 1997 a group of approximately 40 ichthyologists biologists and naturalists from several U S and Mexican institutions formed a collaborative group Truchas Mexicanas to study the diversity of Mexican native trout most of which are considered subspecies of O mykiss 69 Hybridization and habitat loss edit Rainbow trout primarily hatchery raised fish of the coastal rainbow trout subspecies O m irideus introduced into waters inhabited with cutthroat trout will breed with cutthroats and produce fertile hybrids called cutbows 70 In the case of the westslope cutthroat trout O clarki lewisi hybridization with introduced rainbow and Yellowstone cutthroat trout O clarki bouvieri is threatening the westslope cutthroat trout with genomic extinction 71 Such introductions into the ranges of redband trout O m gairdneri newberrii and stonei have severely reduced the range of pure stocks of these subspecies making them species of concern in their respective ranges 72 Within the range of the Kern River golden trout of Southern California hatchery bred rainbows introduced into the Kern River have diluted the genetic purity of the Kern River rainbow trout O m gilberti and golden trout O m aguabonita through intraspecific breeding 73 74 75 The Beardslee trout O m irideus var beardsleei a genetically unique lake dwelling variety of the coastal rainbow trout that is isolated in Lake Crescent Washington is threatened by the loss of its only spawning grounds in the Lyre River to siltation and other types of habitat degradation 11 Invasive species and disease edit Whirling disease edit See also Salmonid susceptibility to whirling disease Myxobolus cerebralis is a myxosporean parasite of salmonids salmon trout and their allies that causes whirling disease in pen farmed salmon and trout and also in wild fish populations 76 It was first described in rainbow trout introduced to Germany a century ago but its range has spread and it has appeared in most of Europe northern Asia the U S South Africa 77 and other countries 78 In the 1980s M cerebralis was found to require Tubifex tubifex a kind of segmented worm to complete its life cycle The parasite infects its hosts with its cells after piercing them with polar filaments ejected from nematocyst like capsules 79 nbsp M cerebralis has been reported in Germany 1893 Italy 1954 USSR 1955 including Sakhalin Island 1960 U S 1958 Bulgaria 1960 Yugoslavia 1960 Sweden 1966 South Africa 1966 Scotland 1968 New Zealand 1971 Ecuador 1971 Norway 1971 Colombia 1972 Lebanon 1973 Ireland 1974 Spain 1981 and England 1981 This parasite was originally a mild pathogen of brown trout in central Europe and other salmonids in northeast Asia and the spread of the rainbow trout has greatly increased its impact Having no innate immunity to M cerebralis rainbow trout are particularly susceptible and can release so many spores that even more resistant species in the same area such as Salmo trutta can become overloaded with parasites and incur mortalities of 80 to 90 percent Where M cerebralis has become well established it has caused a decline or even elimination of whole cohorts of fish 80 81 The parasite M cerebralis was first recorded in North America in 1956 in Pennsylvania 79 but until the 1990s whirling disease was considered a manageable problem affecting only rainbow trout in hatcheries It eventually became established in the natural waters of the Rocky Mountain states Colorado Wyoming Utah Montana Idaho New Mexico where it is damaging several sport fishing rivers Some streams in the western U S lost 90 percent of their trout 82 Whirling disease threatens recreational fishing which is important for the tourism industry a key component of the economies of some U S western states For example in 2005 anglers in Montana spent approximately 196 000 000 in activities directly related to trout fishing in the state 83 Some of the salmonids that M cerebralis infects bull trout cutthroat trout and anadromous forms of rainbow trout steelhead are already threatened or endangered and the parasite could worsen their population decline 84 New Zealand mud snail edit nbsp Distribution of New Zealand mud snail within the U S in 2009The New Zealand mud snail Potamopyrgus antipodarum once endemic to New Zealand has spread widely and has become naturalised and an invasive species in many areas including Australia 85 Asia Japan 86 in the Garmat Ali River in Iraq since 2008 87 Europe since 1859 in England and North America U S and Canada Thunder Bay in Ontario since 2001 British Columbia since July 2007 86 most likely inadvertently during human activity 88 It can reach concentrations greater than 500 000 per square metre 46 000 sq ft endangering the food chain by outcompeting native snails and water insects for food leading to sharp declines in native populations 89 There is evidence North American fishes are unable to digest the tiny but hard shells of the mud snail and that their presence may result in poor growth outcomes for rainbow trout 90 The mud snail was first detected in the U S in Idaho s Snake River in 1987 Since then the snail has spread to the Madison River Firehole River and other watercourses around Yellowstone National Park and has been discovered throughout the western U S 88 The exact means of transmission is unknown but it is likely that it was introduced in water transferred with live game fish and has been spread by ship ballast or contaminated recreational equipment such as wading gear 91 Didymo edit Didymosphenia geminata commonly known as didymo or rock snot is a species of diatom that produces nuisance growths in freshwater rivers and streams with consistently cold water temperatures 92 In New Zealand invasive didymo can form large mats on the bottom of rivers and streams in late winter It is not considered a significant human health risk but it can affect stream habitats and sources of food for fish including rainbow trout and make recreational activities unpleasant 93 Even though it is native in North America it is considered a nuisance organism or invasive species 94 Redmouth disease edit Enteric redmouth disease is a bacterial infection of freshwater and marine fish caused by the pathogen Yersinia ruckeri It is primarily found in rainbow trout and other cultured salmonids The disease is characterized by subcutaneous hemorrhaging of the mouth fins and eyes It is most commonly seen in fish farms with poor water quality Redmouth disease was first discovered in Idaho rainbow trout in the 1950s 95 Removal methods edit Some fisheries are focused on removing rainbow trout in order to reestablish native trout populations This can be done by poisoning rivers with chemicals such as antimycin or rotenone which have been declared safe in the U S by the Environmental Protection Agency Once the chemicals have dissipated native trout are released into the river Another method is to use electrofishing which enables the fish to be caught alive and harvested or re located This technique has been used in the Great Smokey Mountains National Park to rid it of rainbow trout that were introduced in the 1930s and have thrived ever since They are hoping to re establish native brook trout in at least some of the 3 400 km 2 100 mi river system 96 Neither method of control is 100 effective and are best regarded as methods to change the relative population sizes of fish species Steelhead declines edit nbsp A large Steelhead caught on the Zymoetz Copper River in British ColumbiaSee also Steelhead and salmon distinct population segments and Conservation status of British Columbia salmonids Steelhead populations in parts of its native range have declined due to a variety of human and natural causes While populations in Alaska and along the British Columbia coast are considered healthy populations in Kamchatka and some populations along the U S West Coast are in decline The U S National Marine Fisheries Service has 15 identified distinct population segments in Washington Oregon and California Eleven of these populations are listed under the U S Endangered Species Act ten as threatened and one as endangered 97 One distinct population segment on the Oregon coast is designated a U S Species of Concern 97 98 The Southern California distinct population segment which was listed as endangered in 2011 has been affected by habitat loss due to dams confinement of streams in concrete channels water pollution groundwater pumping urban heat island effects and other byproducts of urbanization 99 Steelhead in the Kamchatka Peninsula are threatened by over harvest particularly from poaching and potential development and are listed in the Red Data Book of Russia that documents rare and endangered species 100 Hatchery stocking influence edit nbsp Steelhead hatchery broodstock inspectionSeveral studies have shown that almost all California coastal steelhead are of native origin despite over a century of hatchery stocking Genetic analysis shows that the South Central California Coast and Southern California populations from Malibu Creek north including the San Gabriel River Santa Ana River and San Mateo Creek are not hatchery strains Steelhead from Topanga Creek and the Sweetwater River were partly and those from San Juan Creek completely of hatchery origin 101 Genetic analysis has also shown that the steelhead in the streams of the Santa Clara County and Monterey Bay basins are not of hatchery origin including the Coyote Creek Guadalupe River Pajaro River Permanente Creek Stevens Creek San Francisquito Creek San Lorenzo River and San Tomas Aquino Creek basins 102 Natural waterfalls and two major dams have isolated Russian River steelhead from freshwater rainbow trout forms above the impassable barriers a 2007 genetic study of fin samples collected from steelhead at 20 different sites both above and below passage barriers in the watershed found that although 30 million hatchery trout were stocked in the river from 1911 to 1925 the steelhead remain of native and not hatchery origin 103 Releases of conventionally reared hatchery steelhead pose ecological risks to wild steelhead populations Hatchery steelhead are typically larger than the wild forms and can displace wild form juveniles from optimal habitats The dominance of hatchery steelhead for optimal microhabitats within streams may reduce wild steelhead survival as a result of reduced foraging opportunities and increased rates of predation 104 Uses editFishing edit nbsp Rainbow trout are a popular game fish for fly fishers Rainbow trout and steelhead are highly regarded game fish among anglers Rainbow trout are a popular target for fly fishers and several lure fishing methods are used The use of lures presented via spinning casting or trolling techniques is common Rainbow trout can also be caught on various live and dead natural baits Many anglers consider the rainbow trout the hardest fighting trout species as this fish is known for leaping when hooked and putting up a powerful struggle 105 It is considered one of the top five sport fish in North America and the most important game fish west of the Rocky Mountains 27 There are tribal commercial fisheries for steelhead in Puget Sound the Washington coast and in the Columbia River but there has been controversy regarding overharvesting of native stocks 106 The highly desirable sporting qualities and adaptability of the rainbow trout to hatchery rearing and new habitats resulted in it being introduced to many countries around the world by or at the behest of sport fishermen Many of these introductions have resulted in environmental and ecological problems as the introduced rainbow trout disrupt local ecosystems and outcompete or prey upon indigenous fishes 107 Other introductions to support sport angling in waters either devoid of fish or with seriously depleted native stocks have created world class fisheries such as in the Firehole River in Yellowstone National Park 108 109 110 and in the Great Lakes 111 Record edit The International Game Fish Association recognizes the world record for rainbow trout as a fish caught on Saskatchewan s Lake Diefenbaker by Sean Konrad on September 5 2009 which weighed 48 lb 22 kg The record is controversial because the fish was a genetically modified triploid and was part of a large number of triploid rainbow trout which escaped from an aquaculture facility 112 As food edit See also Salmon as food nbsp Rainbow trout and potatoesRainbow trout is popular in Western cuisine both wild caught and farmed fish are eaten It has tender flesh and a mild somewhat nutty flavor 58 Wild fish has a stronger gamier taste than farmed fish 57 While the taste of wild caught trout is often promoted as superior 113 rainbow trout and steelhead sold in American restaurants is typically farmed 113 Farmed rainbow trout are considered one of the safest fish to eat and are noted for high levels of vitamin B and a generally appealing flavor 114 Seafood Watch ranks farmed rainbow trout as a Best Choice fish for human consumption 53 In Montana it is illegal to sell or market wild caught rainbow trout 115 116 which are legally classified as game fish 117 The color and flavor of the flesh depend on the diet and freshness of the trout Farmed trout and some populations of wild trout especially anadromous steelhead have reddish or orange flesh as a result of high astaxanthin levels in their diets Astaxanthin is a powerful antioxidant that may be from a natural source or a synthetic trout feed Rainbow trout raised to have pinker flesh from a diet high in astaxanthin are sometimes sold in the U S with labeling calling them steelhead 58 As wild steelhead are in decline in some parts of their range farmed rainbow trout are viewed as a preferred alternative 56 In Chile and Norway rainbow trout farmed in saltwater sea cages are sold labeled as steelhead 53 Trout can be cooked as soon as they are cleaned without scaling skinning or filleting 113 If cooked with the skin on the meat tends to hold together better 58 While trout sold commercially in Europe is often prepared and served this way most trout sold commercially in the United States have the fish heads removed and have been fully or partially deboned and filleted Medium to heavy bodied white wines such as chardonnay sauvignon blanc or pinot gris are typical wine pairings for trout 118 In Mainland China since 2018 it was ruled by an industrial association that rainbow trout can be labelled and sold as salmon 119 120 121 Water purification edit nbsp Rainbow trout in a water purification facilityRainbow trout is sometimes used as a biological indicator for water quality in water purification facilities 122 References edit Rainbow Trout Natureserve org 10 May 2016 Retrieved 28 October 2021 data Synonyms of Oncorhynchus mykiss Walbaum 1792 Fishbase Retrieved 2014 02 06 Symbols of Washington State Washington State Legislature Retrieved 2013 11 29 a b Behnke Robert J 2002 Rainbow and Redband Trout Trout and Salmon of North America Tomelleri Joseph R illustrator New York The Free Press p 67 ISBN 978 0 7432 2220 4 a b c Behnke Robert J 2002 Genus Oncorhynchus Trout and Salmon of North America Tomelleri Joseph R illustrator New York The Free Press pp 10 21 ISBN 978 0 7432 2220 4 Richardson John Swainson William Kirby William 1836 Fauna Boreali Americana or The Zoology of the Northern Parts of British America Containing Descriptions of the Objects of Natural History Collected on the Late Northern Land Expeditions Under Command of Captain Sir John Franklin R N 1829 Part Third The Fish London Richard Bentley p 221 OCLC 257860151 Invertebrate Zoology and Geology California Academy of Sciences Archived from the original on 2013 12 12 Retrieved 2013 12 16 Behnke Robert J 1966 Relationships of the Far Eastern Trout Salmo mykiss Walbaum Copeia 1966 2 346 348 doi 10 2307 1441145 JSTOR 1441145 Smith Gerald R Stearley Ralph F 1989 The Classification and Scientific Names of Rainbow and Cutthroat Trouts PDF Fisheries 14 1 4 10 doi 10 1577 1548 8446 1989 014 lt 0004 TCASNO gt 2 0 CO 2 hdl 2027 42 140998 a b Behnke Robert J 2002 Rainbow and Redband Trout Trout and Salmon of North America Tomelleri Joseph R illustrator New York The Free Press pp 65 122 ISBN 978 0 7432 2220 4 a b Meyer J Fradkin S 2002 Summary of Fisheries and Limnological Data for Lake Crescent Washington Olympic National Park Report Port Angeles Washington Rasmussen Joseph B Taylor Eric B 2009 Status of the Athabasca Rainbow Trout Oncorhynchus mykiss in Alberta PDF Government of Alberta Fish and Wildlife Division Archived from the original PDF on 2014 02 21 Retrieved 2013 11 29 Little Kern Golden Trout PDF SOS California s Native Fish Crisis California Trout p 74 Retrieved 2014 01 02 Hendrickson Dean A Perez Hector Espinosa Findley Lloyd T Forbes William Tomelleri Joseph R Mayden Richard L Nielsen Jennifer L Jensen Buddy Campos Gorgonio Ruiz Romero Alejandro Varela van der Heiden Albert Camarena Faustino Gracia de Leon Francisco J 2002 Mexican native trouts A Review of Their History and Current Systematic and Conservation Status PDF Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries 12 2 3 273 316 doi 10 1023 A 1025062415188 S2CID 20102698 Archived from the original PDF on 2014 03 03 McCoy John 2013 05 11 50 Years Later Golden Rainbows Still a Treat for Mountain State Fishermen Saturday Gazette Mail Charleston West Virginia Retrieved 2013 12 29 a b c Golden Rainbow Trout Pennsylvania Fish and Boat Commission FAQ Archived from the original on 2013 11 27 Retrieved 2013 11 28 CERMELE JOE 17 April 2023 Palomino Trout The Lure of the Golden Mutants outdoorlife com Outdoor Life Retrieved 18 April 2023 Golden Rainbow Trout Retrieved 2013 11 28 Behnke Robert J 2002 Rainbow and Redband Trout Trout and Salmon of North America Tomelleri Joseph R illustrator New York The Free Press pp 88 106 ISBN 978 0 7432 2220 4 Behnke Robert J 2002 Cutthroat trout Oncorhynchus clarki Trout and Salmon of North America Tomelleri Joseph R illustrator The Free Press p 139 ISBN 978 0 7432 2220 4 Rainbow Trout Fin Clips PDF Minnesota Department of Natural Resources Archived from the original PDF on 2016 05 09 Retrieved 2013 12 30 Questions and Answers about the Fin Clip Fishery in Hills Creek Reservoir PDF Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife Archived from the original PDF on 2013 12 03 Retrieved 2013 12 01 a b c Behnke Robert J 2002 Rainbow and Redband Trout Trout and Salmon of North America Tomelleri Joseph R illustrator New York The Free Press pp 68 72 ISBN 978 0 7432 2220 4 List of Population Characteristics records for Oncorhynchus mykiss Fishbase Retrieved 2014 02 23 Steelhead Fishing in Lake Erie Tributaries New York State Department of Environmental Conservation Retrieved 2014 02 03 Tyler C R Pottinger T G Santos E Sumpter J P Price S A Brooks S Nagler J J 1996 Mechanisms Controlling Egg Size and Number in Rainbow Trout Oncorhynchus mykiss Biology of Reproduction 54 1 8 15 doi 10 1095 biolreprod54 1 8 PMID 8837994 a b Staley Kathryn Mueller John May 2000 Rainbow Trout Oncorhynchus mykiss PDF U S Department of Agriculture Retrieved 2013 12 16 Wisconsin Trout Fishing Trout Stream Classifications Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources 2014 01 27 Retrieved 2014 01 03 Steelhead Rainbow Trout Species Profile Alaska Department of Fish and Game Retrieved 2013 08 26 Mariculture in Tasmania Ocean Trout Marine Education Association of Australasia Retrieved 2014 02 23 Behnke Robert J 2002 Rainbow and Redband Trout Trout and Salmon of North America Tomelleri Joseph R illustrator New York The Free Press p 70 ISBN 978 0 7432 2220 4 Nichols Krista M Edo Alicia Felip Wheeler Paul A Thorgaard Gary H July 2008 The Genetic Basis of Smoltification Related Traits in Oncorhynchus mykiss Genetics 179 3 1559 1575 doi 10 1534 genetics 107 084251 PMC 2475755 PMID 18562654 Hale MC Thrower FP Berntson EA Miller MR Nichols KM August 2013 Evaluating Adaptive Divergence Between Migratory and Nonmigratory Ecotypes of a Salmonid Fish Oncorhynchus mykiss G3 Genes Genomes Genetics 3 8 1273 1285 doi 10 1534 g3 113 006817 PMC 3737167 PMID 23797103 Recreational Salmon Fishing Salmon Steelhead Species Information Steelhead Rainbow Trout Oncorhynchus mykiss Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife Archived from the original on 2014 01 07 Retrieved 2014 01 07 Rollo C D 2002 Growth negatively 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the original PDF on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2013 11 29 South Central Southern California Coast Steelhead Recovery Planning Domain 5 Year Review Summary and Evaluation of Southern California Coast Steelhead Distinct Population Segment PDF National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration 2011 Retrieved 2013 12 03 Rahr III Guido Bountiful Breed Kamchatka Siberia s Forbidden Wilderness Public Broadcasting System PBS Retrieved 2013 12 04 Clemento Anthony J Anderson Eric C Boughton David Girman Derek Garza John Carlos 2009 Population Genetic Structure and Ancestry of Oncorhynchus mykiss Populations Above and Below Dams in South central California PDF Conservation Genetics 10 5 1321 1336 doi 10 1007 s10592 008 9712 0 S2CID 32490944 Retrieved 2014 01 03 Garza John Carlos Pearse Devon March 2008 Population Genetics of Oncorhynchus mykiss in the Santa Clara Valley Region Final Report to the Santa Clara Valley Water District Report Santa Clara Valley Water District pp 1 54 Deiner Kristy Garza John Carlos Coey Robert Girman Derek J 2007 Population Structure and Genetic Diversity of Trout Oncorhynchus mykiss Above and Below Natural and Man made Barriers in the Russian River California PDF Conservation Genetics 8 2 437 454 doi 10 1007 s10592 006 9183 0 hdl 10211 1 1550 S2CID 6159852 Archived from the original PDF on 2014 01 04 Retrieved 2011 06 12 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link McMichael G A Pearsons T N Leider S A 1999 Behavioral Interactions Among Hatchery reared Steelhead Smolts and Wild Oncorhynchus mykiss in Natural Streams North American Journal of Fisheries Management 19 4 948 956 doi 10 1577 1548 8675 1999 019 lt 0948 BIAHRS gt 2 0 CO 2 Waterman Charles F 1971 The Fisherman s World New York Random House p 57 ISBN 978 0 394 41099 9 OCLC 319916607 Stellmon Josh 2008 Under the Guise of Treaty Rights The Nez Perce Tribe of Idaho Steelhead and Gillnetting Public Land and Resources Law Review 29 Archived from the original on 2017 05 25 Retrieved 2014 01 05 100 of the World s Worst Invasive Alien Species Invasive Species Specialist Group ISSG of the IUCN Species Survival Commission Retrieved 2013 11 28 Brooks Charles E 1979 The Living River A Fisherman s Intimate Profile of the Madison River Watershed Its History Ecology Lore and Angling Opportunities Garden City New Jersey Nick Lyons Books pp 56 59 ISBN 978 0 385 15655 4 OCLC 5751574 The Yellowstone Fly Fishing Guide Guilford CT The Globe Pequot Press 1997 p 11 ISBN 978 1 55821 545 0 In 1994 Yellowstone Park official introduced a fee permit policy to help pay the increased cost of protecting and enhancing this world class fishery Santella Chris 2004 Brown and Rainbow trout on the Madison River Fifty Places to Fly Fish Before You Die Fly Fishing Experts Share The World s Greatest Destinations Harry M Abrams Inc ISBN 978 1 58479 356 4 thanks to the Firehole s geothermal activity the river bottom undulates with plant life Few fish are caught here and tourists continue on to the West Yellowstone park exit thinking that it s too bad there are no fish in that pretty river that skirts the road Little do they know that they have been following one of the most fabled trout streams in the world Fishing New York s Great Lakes New York State Department of Environmental Conservation Archived from the original on 2021 06 09 Retrieved 2013 11 28 Keim Brandon 2009 09 15 48 Pound Trout World Record or Genetic Cheat Wired Retrieved 2013 11 29 a b c Wright Leonard M 1996 Trout Maverick New York Lyons amp Burford p 19 ISBN 978 1 55821 476 7 Cancila Katherine 2010 09 16 The 5 Safest Fish to Eat Salmon Tilapia Rainbow Trout and More Babble Disney Retrieved 2014 01 06 87 6 206 Montana Code Annotated Montana Legislative Services 2014 Archived from the original on 2018 06 04 Retrieved 2014 01 06 87 6 707 Montana Code Annotated Montana Legislative Services 2014 Archived from the original on 2020 10 01 Retrieved 2014 01 06 87 6 101 Montana Code Annotated Montana Legislative Services 2014 Archived from the original on 2018 06 03 Retrieved 2014 01 06 Pairing Wine with Fish Wine Folly May 20 2013 Retrieved 2014 02 15 Rainbow trout can now be called salmon in China BBC News August 14 2018 China rules rainbow trout can now be sold as salmon in attempt to reduce counterfeit fish sales The Independent August 14 2018 Very fishy China rules rainbow trout can be sold as salmon The Guardian August 14 2018 Pokorny J Randak T 2001 Use of rainbow trout for checking water inflowing to the drinking water purification plants Report in Czech Jihoceska Univerzita Archived from the original on 2022 01 29 Retrieved 2019 07 06 Further reading editCombs Trey 1976 Steelhead Fly Fishing and Flies Portland Oregon Frank Amato ISBN 978 0 936608 03 7 Combs Trey 1991 Steelhead Fly Fishing New York Lyons and Burford Publishers ISBN 978 1 55821 119 3 Gerlach Rex 1988 Fly Fishing for Rainbows Strategies and tactics for North America s Favorite Trout Mechanicsburg Pennsylvania Stackpole Books ISBN 978 0 8117 0624 7 Halverson Anders 2010 An Entirely Synthetic Fish How Rainbow Trout Beguiled America and Overran the World New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 14088 0 OCLC 440281085 Review Interviews Marshall Mel 1973 Steelhead New York Winchester Press ISBN 978 0 87691 093 1 McClane A J Gardner Keith 1984 Rainbow Trout and Steelhead McClane s Game Fish of North America New York Times Books pp 54 93 ISBN 978 0 8129 1134 3 McDermand Charles 1946 Waters of the Golden Trout Country New York G P Putnam s Sons Montaigne Fen 1998 Kamchatka Reeling in Russia New York St Martins Press pp 251 270 ISBN 978 0 312 18595 4 Scott and Crossman 1985 Freshwater Fishes of Canada Bulletin 184 Fisheries Research Board of Canada Page 189 ISBN 0 660 10239 0 Walden Howard T 2nd 1964 Rainbow Cutthroat and Golden Trout Familiar Freshwater Fishes of America New York Harper amp Row Publishers pp 14 33 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link External links edit nbsp Wikibooks Cookbook has a recipe module on Trout nbsp Media related to Oncorhynchus mykiss at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Data related to Oncorhynchus mykiss at Wikispecies Froese Rainer Pauly Daniel eds 2006 Oncorhynchus mykiss in FishBase February 2006 version Oncorhynchus mykiss Integrated Taxonomic Information System Retrieved 2006 01 30 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rainbow trout amp oldid 1184789139, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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