Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 22, 1956
Comparative Stomach Analysis
of Crater Lake Fishes
By Dick S. Baird, Ranger-Naturalist
On account of the great interest in
fishing in Crater Lake, many studies have been, and are being, carried
out to try to find out more about the fish in Crater Lake. In any
program such as this, one of the first projects to be carried out is a
stomach analysis to determine what types of food present are being
utilized by the fish.
Crater Lake, having no known inlet or
outlet, could have no native fish. All of the fish in the lake are
either planted fish, or offspring of planted fish. The first planting
was carried out in 1888 by William G. Steel. At that time he planted 37
rainbow trout fingerlings into the lake waters. Since that time there
have been many other plantings. The first recorded plantings of the
rainbow trout, (Salmo gairdnerii gairdnerii) and the sockeye
salmon, (Oncorhynchus nerka), were carried out in 1909 by park
personnel. The last plantings were in 1937 for the sockeye salmon, and
1941 for the rainbow trout.
For the last few years fishing in
Crater Lake has not been exceptional, in fact many people would refer to
it as poor. The long duration since the last stocking is undoubtedly one
of the factors affecting the condition of the fishing, but by no means
the only one.
On the basis of analyzing six rainbow
trout stomachs, and four sockeye salmon stomachs, it was found that
insect forms, both adult and larval, are the most used source of food
for the fishes. Every stomach examined contained some sort of insect
material.

"Crater Lake fish. Two large rainbow trout flanked by
Sockeye salmon. N.P.S. photo."
There is a great deal of variety among
the types of insects used by the fish, as they represented nine orders
or groups, and many more families. These orders listed according to
frequency of occurrence are; the flies (Diptera), the moths and
butterflies (Lepidoptera), the beetles (Coleoptera), the
bees, ants, and wasps (Hymenoptera), the caddie flies (Trichoptera),
the mayflies (Ephemerida), the stone flies (Plecoptera)
the snake flies (Phaphidiodea) and the biting and sucking bugs (Hemiptera).
Along with the insect forms were found
the fresh water shrimp (Hyalella), a snail, and a spider.
The breakdown as to the type of insects
per species of fish is a follows:
Rainbow Trout (six
stomachs)
| Lepidoptera |
five stomachs |
| Diptera |
three stomachs |
| Hymenoptera |
three stomachs |
| Coleoptera |
three stomachs |
| Trichoptera |
two stomachs |
| Phaphidiodea |
one stomach |
| Hemiptera |
one stomach |
Sockeye Salmon (four
stomachs)
| Diptera |
three stomach |
| Coleoptera |
one stomach |
| Trichoptera |
one stomach |
| Plecoptera |
one stomach |
| Ephemerida |
one stomach |
| Hymenoptera |
one stomach |
It can be seen from the above that many
groups of insects are used by both types of fish fairly equally, while
other orders are used more by one type of fish than by the other. The
Diptera, Trichoptera,
Coleoptera, and Hymenoptera were used by both types of
fish. The rainbow trout also made use of the Lepidoptera,
Hemiptera, and Phaphidiodea, while the sockeye salmon made
use of the Plecoptera and the Ephemerida.
Some of these differences in food
habits can be explained without too much trouble. The abundance of the
Lepidoptera in the rainbow trout, and the lack of the same in the
sockeye salmon, is due to the fact that all of the rainbow trout were
taken in 1952, which happened to be a year of great abundance for the
California tortoise-shell butterfly in this area also. The sockeye
salmon were taken in 1953 when the California tortoise- shell butterfly
was no longer in abundance, therefore they do not occur in the sockeye
salmon stomachs.
The Plecoptera and the
Ephemerida in the sockeye salmon stomachs and not in the rainbow
trout stomachs might be explained as a matter of chance. Although the
individuals in the stomachs were in abundance, all of the Plecoptera
found were from the one stomach, while all of the Ephemerida
found were also taken from but one stomach.
The presence of the Phaphidiodea
and the Hemiptera in the rainbow trout can probably be explained
much the same way, merely the chance happening across some concentrated
specialized food supply, and not a matter of different food preference
between the two types of fish.
All of the fresh water shrimp, along
with the snail and the spider, were taken from merely isolated stomachs
also, which could lead one to apply the same explanation there as used
above.
As far as can be determined by this
study, the food preferences in the two types of fish in the waters of
Crater Lake do not differ. Both species of fish would probably use the
same types of food if they were available to the fish. This is born out
not only by this study, but by the angling information also, as both
species of fish inhabit the same areas, and can be taken on the same
kinds of fishing lures.