Lee, D.N., J.B. Lack, R.A. Van Den Bussche, and J.M. Long. 2011. Importance of tributary streams for rainbow trout reproduction: insights from a small stream and a bi-genomic approach. River Research and Applications 28:1587-1593.
Abstract
Tributaries of tailwater fisheries in the southeastern USA have been used for spawning by stocked rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss), but their
importance may have been underestimated using traditional fish survey methods such as electrofishing and redd counts. We used a bigenomic
approach, mitochondrial DNA sequences and nuclear microsatellite loci, to estimate the number of spawning adults in one small
tributary (Cabin Creek) of the Chattahoochee River, Georgia, where rainbow trout are known to spawn and have successful recruitment.
We extracted and analysed DNA from seven mature male rainbow trout and four juveniles that were captured in February 2006 in Cabin
Creek and from 24 young‐of‐year (YOY) trout that were captured in April 2006. From these samples, we estimated that 24 individuals were
spawning to produce the amount of genetic variation observed in the juveniles and YOY, although none of the mature males we sampled were
indicated as sires. Analysis of the mitochondrial D‐loop region identified four distinct haplotypes, suggesting that individuals representing four
maternal lineages contributed to the offspring. Our analyses indicated that many more adults were spawning in this system than previously
estimated with direct count methods and provided insight into rainbow trout spawning behavior.