Abstract

Many salmonids, including brown trout ( Salmo trutta), demonstrate alternative migration strategies under different environmental conditions, and as such, they are assumed to be predominantly facultative. Through experimental breeding for two generations, we produced purebred, crossed, and backcrossed groups of phenotypically resident, migratory, and hybrid strains of brown trout originating from a single watershed, and raised them in common-garden conditions. We examined the spring smolt migration tendency of the crosses in outdoor circular channels using passive integrated transponder telemetry at ages 2 and 3 years and found consistent and individually repeatable interstrain differences in migration distance and migration activity. The crossbred fish displayed intermediate behaviour, while later release to the migration channels with food augmentation affected the temporal dynamics of migration but not the total distances migrated. Migration tendency was positively associated with physiological smoltification and fish growth metrics. These results show that some earlier results interpreted as phenotypic plasticity may instead reflect genetic differences within and among populations. The intrinsic differences in reaction norms for both growth and migration tendency require novel management attention for effective conservation strategies.

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