Abstract

Individual growth patterns in red-spotted masu salmon,Oncorhynchus masou rhodurus, were examined by mark and recapture in a mountain stream, central Japan. The growth pattern varied substantially among individuals of the same age cohort in the stream. Mean absolute growth rates of the individuals were neither significantly different between years, study sections along the stream course, or sexes, but showed significant differences between seasons. No correlation was found between the individual growth rate of fish and the area of pools they inhabited. However, there was considerable growth variation among inhabitants of the same pool. Within a pool, larger individuals grew more rapidly than smaller ones, despite there being no significant relationship between individual growth rates and initial body weights in the stream overall. Individual growth differences probably resulted from growth depensation caused by intraspecific competition within individual pools.

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