Abstract

Traditional methods for modeling growth of free-ranging fish are often limited by missing recapture observations that prevent individual growth estimates for a given time interval. Our purpose is to present a method for modeling growth rates of juvenile steelhead ( Oncorhynchus mykiss ) that addresses this limitation. Age-1 juvenile steelhead were individually marked with passive integrated transponder (PIT) tags, released in a Michigan, USA, watershed, and sampled monthly (May–November) with barge electrofishing. Individual growth was modeled using daily water temperature and observed fish sizes as inputs and by determining the proportion of maximum consumption parameter (P) for the bioenergetics equation that provided a minimum residual squared error. Results demonstrate that individual steelhead growth can be accurately modeled using water temperature and a temporally specific P shared by all individuals. Advantages of using this method to model fish growth include the ability to bridge data gaps where observations are lacking in individual length histories, rigorously test for differences in P across time periods, and estimate variability of P among fish within a given stream reach.

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