The brookies that are Planted in CA *ARE* flawed, as they were selectively bred for early sexual development (they mature at least a year younger than typical brookies), which is believed to be a component in the Stunting Problem we see in most high-sierra brookie lakes.
castaway wrote:) Interbreeding with wild trout... YES this is a huge problem for the true native species of trout. Coastal ranbows, goldens, KRR, etc have all suffered from "stocking" However... the genetic lineage of stocked trout can be traced back to the Russian river in Ca. and the McCloud river in California... So by planting these fish in waters that do not contain Golden trout, KRR, redbands. etc.... we are not causing further damage to the genetic puriety of the native species... The Owens river drainage, the Kings, the Lower portions of the Kern, etc... are examples of places that planting trout will not degrade the genetic puriety of any "native" species.
More or less, yes... but once a wild population is established in a river or stream that is capable of self-sustaining its population.... stocking is at the least a poor use of resources.
I would LOVE to see california adopt stocking programs that focus more on creating quality fisheries than enhancing harvest.
1. Don't stock any fish in places they can successfully spawn... let the trout's biology take Care of that.
2. Severely limit harvest on wild populations (hatchery derived originally or not).
3. Stock the daylights out of the reservoirs and seasonal streams that cannot support trout reproduction, to create a very robust set of fisheries.
4. On colder-water reservoirs that can support trout life year-round, dedicate a good portion of the stocking budget on fingerling/put and grow plants, delayed harvest, etc... to maximize the numbers of fish in the water throughout the year... not just the first 6 days after the stocking truck comes.