The silver trout (''Salvelinus agassizii'') is an
extinct
Extinction is the termination of an organism by the death of its Endling, last member. A taxon may become Functional extinction, functionally extinct before the death of its last member if it loses the capacity to Reproduction, reproduce and ...
char species or subspecies that inhabited a few waters in
New Hampshire
New Hampshire ( ) is a U.S. state, state in the New England region of the Northeastern United States. It borders Massachusetts to the south, Vermont to the west, Maine and the Gulf of Maine to the east, and the Canadian province of Quebec t ...
in the
United States
The United States of America (USA), also known as the United States (U.S.) or America, is a country primarily located in North America. It is a federal republic of 50 U.S. state, states and a federal capital district, Washington, D.C. The 48 ...
prior to 1939, when a biological survey conducted on the Connecticut watershed by the
New Hampshire Fish and Game Department found none.
Description
The silver trout was about a foot long. It had an olive-green back that faded to a bright silver underside tinged with vermillion. Females had faint golden spots along their side. Males were darker-colored with more red on the belly, and had small red spots within their golden spots. Size-based
sexual dimorphism
Sexual dimorphism is the condition where sexes of the same species exhibit different Morphology (biology), morphological characteristics, including characteristics not directly involved in reproduction. The condition occurs in most dioecy, di ...
was also far more pronounced among the silver trout than among other char, with males being much larger than females, as opposed to only a slight size difference in other char species.
Taxonomy

The distinctiveness of the silver trout was noted by famed naturalist
Louis Agassiz
Jean Louis Rodolphe Agassiz ( ; ) FRS (For) FRSE (May 28, 1807 – December 14, 1873) was a Swiss-born American biologist and geologist who is recognized as a scholar of Earth's natural history.
Spending his early life in Switzerland, he recei ...
as far back as 1859, who requested specimens of trout from Dublin Pond, and upon analyzing them, identified them as a taxon distinct from the brook trout.
To formally describe the species and prevent local fishermen from overharvesting in the absence of bag limits, specimens were sent to Harvard and the U.S. National Museum for identification, where the fish was first described as a form of
lake trout
The lake trout (''Salvelinus namaycush'') is a freshwater Salvelinus, char living mainly in lakes in Northern North America. Other names for it include mackinaw, namaycush, lake char (or charr), touladi, togue, laker, and grey trout. In Lake Sup ...
(''Salvelinus namaycush''), and later as a variety of
brook trout
The brook trout (''Salvelinus fontinalis'') is a species of freshwater fish in the char genus ''Salvelinus'' of the salmon family Salmonidae native to Eastern North America in the United States and Canada. Two ecological forms of brook trout h ...
(''Salvelinus fontinalis'') by
Spencer Fullerton Baird
Spencer Fullerton Baird (; February 3, 1823 – August 19, 1887) was an American naturalist, ornithologist, ichthyologist, Herpetology, herpetologist, and museum curator. Baird was the first curator to be named at the Smithsonian Institution. He ...
.
The silver trout was described as ''Salmo agassizii'' by
Samuel Garman
Samuel Walton Garman (June 5, 1843 – September 30, 1927), or "Garmann" as he sometimes styled himself, was an American naturalist and zoologist. He became noted as an ichthyologist and herpetologist.
Biography
Garman was born in Indiana Co ...
in 1885, honoring Agassiz for his early identification of the fish. However,
David Starr Jordan
David Starr Jordan (January 19, 1851 – September 19, 1931) was the founding president of Stanford University, serving from 1891 to 1913. He was an ichthyologist during his research career. Prior to serving as president of Stanford Universi ...
disputed this classification and reiterated that the silver trout was only a subspecies or color morph of the brook trout, referring to it as ''Salvelinus fontinalis agassizi''. Jordan would later accept it as a distinct species in his book ''American Food and Game Fishes''. W. C. Kendall, who published a famous monograph on New England chars in 1914, in turn concluded that the silver trout was related to the
Arctic char
The Arctic char or Arctic charr (''Salvelinus alpinus'') is a cold-water fish in the family Salmonidae, native to alpine lakes, as well as Arctic and subarctic coastal waters in the Holarctic realm, Holarctic.
Distribution and habitat
It Spaw ...
(''Salvelinus alpinus'').
Re-examining the 13 silver trout specimens in the U.S. National Museum by matching the markings on the dorsal fin and tail, the numbers of vertebrae, and the array of pelvic fin rays and between different species,
Robert J. Behnke concluded that the silver trout was most closely related to the brook trout, while the divergence was still concluded to be enough to place it outside of typical ''S. fontinalis''. Behnke concluded the silver trout evolved from brook trout ancestors in New England lakes with deep, cold, clear, well-oxygenated depths as a planktivorous fish.
Distribution
The silver trout was an exceedingly rare fish, having become trapped by changed drainage systems in two New Hampshire lakes (
Dublin/Monadnock Pond and
Christine Lake in
Stark) that were left as successors of
Lake Hitchcock, a very large glacial lake that persisted for 4,000 years where the silver trout probably evolved from brook trout.
[ In the deep waters of these lakes, cut off from other species, the silver trout had no natural predators.]
In Kendall's 1914 monograph, an 1884 letter from a local fish warden is reproduced. The warden states that both silver and brook trout were captured from Dublin Pond for a project to stock nearby Stone Pond. It is unknown whether this effort was successful.
Ecology
The silver trout inhabited the deeper reaches in the center of Dublin/Monadnock Pond for most of the year, migrating to the shallows to spawn during the fall. These migrations were apparently timed precisely to the first day of October, with it being alleged that an fisherman could harvest several dozen pounds on October 1 when they had caught none the previous day. They congregated around cavities in submerged rocks along the shoreline during spawning.
The silver trout was apparently one of only two native gamefish species that originally inhabited Dublin Pond prior to the introduction of other fish species. The other was a "perch" of uncertain affinities that inhabited an entirely different reach of the pond. The silver trout and the perch were never seen or caught together.
Extinction
The silver trout had already been significantly diminished in Dublin Pond by 1874, with claims of much larger populations in the past. Fishermen managed to get around bag limits
A bag limit is a law imposed on hunters and fishermen restricting the number of animals within a specific species or group of species they may kill and keep. Size limits and hunting seasons sometimes accompany bag limits which place restrictions ...
for the species by declaring it a "lake trout
The lake trout (''Salvelinus namaycush'') is a freshwater Salvelinus, char living mainly in lakes in Northern North America. Other names for it include mackinaw, namaycush, lake char (or charr), touladi, togue, laker, and grey trout. In Lake Sup ...
" in the winter and a "brook trout
The brook trout (''Salvelinus fontinalis'') is a species of freshwater fish in the char genus ''Salvelinus'' of the salmon family Salmonidae native to Eastern North America in the United States and Canada. Two ecological forms of brook trout h ...
" in the summer (coinciding with the respective hunting seasons for both fish). This loophole was resolved after taxonomic analysis was performed by Spencer Fullerton Baird
Spencer Fullerton Baird (; February 3, 1823 – August 19, 1887) was an American naturalist, ornithologist, ichthyologist, Herpetology, herpetologist, and museum curator. Baird was the first curator to be named at the Smithsonian Institution. He ...
, who declared them a form of a brook trout, forcing fishermen to abide by the brook trout's bag limit.
By the late 19th century, as each lake developed its own steady summer tourism, recreational fishermen
A fisherman or fisher is someone who captures fish and other animals from a body of water, or gathers shellfish.
Worldwide, there are about 38 million commercial and subsistence fishers and fish farmers. Fishermen may be professional or recr ...
who sought to increase their catches began to introduce new fish species, and these eventually overwhelmed the native silver trout. Yellow perch
The yellow perch (''Perca flavescens''), commonly referred to as perch, striped perch, American perch or preacher is a freshwater perciform fish native to much of North America. The yellow perch was described in 1814 by Samuel Latham Mitchill fr ...
, which eat trout eggs, and lake trout, which hold the same ecological niche, as well as eat and hybridize with other char species, were particularly devastating. Other species were also introduced that have proved to be devastating to native trout species in other waters, the rainbow trout
The rainbow trout (''Oncorhynchus mykiss'') is a species of trout native to cold-water tributary, tributaries of the Pacific Ocean in North America and Asia. The steelhead (sometimes called steelhead trout) is an Fish migration#Classification, ...
, brown trout
The brown trout (''Salmo trutta'') is a species of salmonid ray-finned fish and the most widely distributed species of the genus ''Salmo'', endemic to most of Europe, West Asia and parts of North Africa, and has been widely introduced globally ...
, Atlantic salmon
The Atlantic salmon (''Salmo salar'') is a species of ray-finned fish in the family Salmonidae. It is the third largest of the Salmonidae, behind Hucho taimen, Siberian taimen and Pacific Chinook salmon, growing up to a meter in length. Atlan ...
, and rainbow smelt
The rainbow smelt (''Osmerus mordax'') is a North American species of fish of the family (biology), family Osmeridae. Walleye, trout, and other larger fish prey on these smelt. The rainbow smelt prefer juvenile cisco (fish), ciscoes, zooplankton ...
.
The last six confirmed specimens of silver trout were collected in 1930, and it was declared extinct the same year. However, potential later records exist of a number of alleged silver trout specimens caught throughout the 1930s, which were documented by John E. Coffin in the January 1939 issue of ''Outdoor Life
''Outdoor Life'' is an outdoors magazine about camping, fishing, hunting, and survival. For years, it was a sister magazine of '' Field & Stream''. Together with '' Sports Afield'', they are considered the Big Three of American outdoor publish ...
''. One was also caught by Coffin himself, who documented his efforts in the article. However, without an analysis of the gill rakers, the true identity of these trout remains uncertain.
While the silver trout is most likely extinct, success stories like the Pyramid Lake Lahontan cutthroat trout
Lahontan cutthroat trout'','' ''Oncorhynchus henshawi'',Markle, D. (2018). An interim classification of the cutthroat trout complex, Oncorhynchus clarkii Sensu Lato, with comments on nomenclature. In Trotter P., Bisson P., Schultz L., & Roper B. ...
and the Sunapee golden trout exist, and it may still persist.
References
External links
*
{{Taxonbar, from=Q142933
Salvelinus
Cold water fish
Fish of North America becoming extinct since 1500
Taxa named by Samuel Garman
Fish described in 1885
Extinct animals of the United States
Natural history of New Hampshire
Species that are or were threatened by invasive species