Abstract
Abstract Population enumeration is a key component of fisheries investigations for riverine salmonines. We examined the reliability of a rapid population assessment technique for stream salmonines that depends on a single episode of electrofishing rather than traditional multiple fishing, removal, or mark–recapture methods. We show that for 12 sites sampled in 1992 on Wilmot Creek, a small, coldwater tributary to Lake Ontario, the catch of salmonines from a single electrofishing episode predicted the population estimate obtained with a more time-consuming multiple-pass removal method. When we collected similar data from eight additional Lake Ontario tributary sites in 1994, the relationship was not significantly different from that obtained in 1992. We also conducted nonparametric analyses of covariance on subsets of these data and found no significant differences in the above relationship for rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss versus brown trout Salmo trutta or for age-0 versus older fish, although the st...
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