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Last modified
7/14/2009 5:02:37 PM
Creation date
5/18/2009 12:08:02 AM
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UCREFRP
UCREFRP Catalog Number
9660
Author
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
Title
Colorado Squawfish Revised Recovery Plan - Draft.
USFW Year
1990.
USFW - Doc Type
Denver, CO.
Copyright Material
NO
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DRAFT <br />formation for 182 Colorado squawfish from the upper Green River, Utah. The <br />fish ranged in estimated age from I to XI and the results were: I=44 mm <br />(1.7 in.); II=95 mm (3.1 in.); III=162 mm (6.4 in.); IV=238 mm (9.4 in.); <br />V=320 mm (12.6 in.); VI=391 mm (15.4 in.); VIII=499 mm (19.6 in.); and <br />X=600 mm (23.6 in.). Seethaler (1978) found similar growth rates for Colorado <br />squawfish in both the Green and Colorado rivers. However, recent studies <br />using otoliths suggest that scales may not be accurate for ageing this species <br />(W.L. Minckley, unpublished data). At Willow Beach National Fish Hatchery, <br />Colorado squawfish hatched in the summer of 1980 doubled their length in <br />14 days and attained a size of 48-50 mm (1.9-1.96 in.) in 110 days (Hamman <br />1981). Growth of broodstock held in cold water (lOoC [50oF]) at Willow Beach <br />National Fish Hatchery in 1913 and 1974 was slow. Seven adult fish gained a <br />total of only 0.64 kg (1.41 lbs) over a 9-month period after being fed 40.8 kg <br />(90 lbs.) of live fingerling trout (Toney 1974). Length-weight relationships <br />of these fish was similar to that for wild fish reported by Vanicek and Kramer <br />(1969) and Seethaler (1978). <br />Fingerling Colorado squawfish (50-91 mm [2-3.6 in.] TL) stocked in grow-out <br />ponds near Grand Junction, Colorado, grew to a range of 185-304 mm <br />(7.3-12 in.) TL in 1 year (Osmundson 1987). Similar sizes .were attained by <br />Colorado squawfish in the adjacent Colorado River in about 4 years (Kaeding <br />and Osmundson 1988). The difference in growth was attributed to warmer water <br />temperatures (about 1.8 times more dggree-days than the river), lack of <br />competitors, and an abundant food supply in the pond. Growth was slower and <br />more variable in other ponds in the same area, which was probably due to the <br />variation in limnological characteristics (e.g., water temperature, nutrients, <br />food abundance, size of food items, etc.). <br />Food Habits <br />Food of young Colorado squawfish consists mainly of zooplankton and insect <br />larvae. Other fish species feed on the same food items as young-of-the-year <br />Colorado squawfish (McAda and Tyus 1984). Fry at Willow Beach National Fish <br />Hatchery fed on zooplankton in fertilized raceways (Hamman 1981). Colorado <br />squawfish become predatory at a very early age. Fish as small as 30 mm <br />(1 in.) have been documented to eat other fish (Tyus and-.Karp 1990). Nearly <br />86 percent of the diet of juvenile Colorado squawfish is fish, with the major <br />prey being red shiner (Notropis lutrensis) an introduced cyprinid (Jacobi and <br />Jacobi 1982). Adults are almost exclusively piscivorous, feeding on most <br />native and many introduced fishes present in the river (Vanicek and Kramer <br />1969). Nonnative fish presumably have entered their diet more frequently as <br />native fishes have declined (Holden and Wick 1982). However, Beckman (1952) <br />reported that jackrabbits and other animals were used historically by anglers <br />as bait for Colorado squawfish. Minckley (pers. comm.) observed a large <br />Colorado squawfish eat two newly hatched American coots (Fulica amer___ ic_an_a) at <br />Dexter National Fish Hatchery, New Mexico. Tyus and Minckley (1988) reported <br />four Colorado squawfish feeding on Mormon crickets in Dinosaur National <br />Monument, Colorado, and speculated on the significance of large-outbreaks of <br />crickets as food for the endemic fish fauna. <br />12 <br />
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