Abstract

Despite documented negative effects on aquatic ecosystems, management agencies commonly receive requests to stock non-native rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss (Walbaum). We used a multinomial N-mixture model and a suite of diet analyses to evaluate effects of large (265–530 mm) rainbow trout on reach-scale abundance and feeding ecology of an important endemic, keystone species, Neosho bass Micropterus velox (Hubbs and Bailey). We evaluated potential changes by seasonally sampling multiple reaches of an Ozark Highlands stream before and after the introduction of 10,800 rainbow trout. Results suggest that rainbow trout altered the distribution of Neosho bass, as indicated by a negative relationship between rainbow trout density and Neosho bass abundance. Trophically, rainbow trout and Neosho bass <101 mm were equivalent, but rainbow trout diets significantly overlapped with larger Neosho bass. High rainbow trout abundance in the spring post-stocking period changed Neosho bass diets by altering predator–prey dynamics with crayfish. Controlling for fish size revealed Neosho bass consumed larger crayfish than rainbow trout, although rainbow trout and Neosho bass between 200 and 299 mm consumed equal-sized crayfish. Outcomes of rainbow trout stockings are likely density- and size-dependent, but caution is warranted for introductions in warmwater streams.

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