SynopsisGrowth and survival of Colorado squawfish, Ptychocheilus lucius, larvae under fluctuating 18, 22, and 26° C (5 0 C diel fluctuations) and constant 18, 22, 26° C, and 30° C temperature conditions and ration size corresponding to 12 .5, 28, 64,142, 320 brine shrimp nauplii fish -'day-'was determined from laboratory experiments . Growth was optimal at 31° C and high at temperatures of 26° C to 30° C, at the highest food abundance . Lowest growth was under lowest food rations and highest temperatures . Growth of Colorado squawfish larvae declined substantially at temperatures < 22° C. Neither growth nor survival was significantly different between fluctuating or constant regimes . Survival of Colorado squawfish larvae was highest (95%) at 26 .2° C and 235 nauplii fish -' day-' and high at temperatures of 20 to 30° C with food abundance > 180 nauplii fish -' day-' . Survival was lowest when food abundance was low and temperature was high . Highest mortality occurred more than 20 days after experiments began and mortalities occurred sooner in higher than lower temperatures . Colorado squawfish larvae denied food for 5, 10, or 15 d after first feeding could have begun (6 d), had survival greater than 87 % which was equivalent to continuously fed controls . Survival of fish denied food for 17 .5 d after feeding could have begun declined from 84% before feeding to 57% after feeding . Point of no return was estimated between 17 .5 and 20 d . Colorado squawfish have relatively high starvation resistance. Low, stable flows that simulate natural hydrographs may enhance growth, survival, and recruitment of early life stages of Colorado squawfish by increasing water temperature and food abundance in regulated rivers of the Colorado River basin .