Concurrent rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) stomach contents and invertebrate drift samples were collected during three 24-h periods in summer 1987. Feeding was discontinuous through the day on all dates. Mean stomach content weight was minimal after 0400 MST and sharply increased between 1000 and 1200 MST on all three dates. Feeding apparently did not occur after twilight. Mean stomach content weight was correlated with water temperature on two dates and was never correlated with invertebrate drift density for non-age-0 trout. Daily ration (wet weight) was 7% of live weight for non-age-0 trout and 21% for age-0 trout. Trichoptera, Ephemeroptera, and Diptera were most important in the diet; terrestrial insects and aquatic vertebrates were rare. The degree of selectivity varied through 24 h and the interpretation depended on the method of analysis used. Occurrence of low-drift cased Trichoptera larvae in stomachs was correlated with amount of filamentous algae ingested, indicating a degree of epibenthic foraging, although no diel pattern could be reliably discerned. Mean length of prey items in stomachs was larger that the drift in 83% of the samples. Our findings support experimentally derived decision rules-of-thumb for foraging trout: select larger prey items, select vulnerable prey, and relax selectivity when hungry.
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