Hello fellow ecolog'ers,

I am an MSc student studying environmental effects on phenotypic development 
and fitness of 
juvenile Atlantic salmon. 

I conducted a study where I incubated salmon eggs in 2 different environments, 
measured a few 
phenotypic traits, and placed equal numbers of fish from both incubation 
environments in "semi-
natural" stream channels to measure survival and growth in the first 45 days 
post-emergence. Thus, 
fish from both treatment groups were competing in the stream channels with only 
natural prey items 
available.

The fish were too small to individually mark them at the onset of the 
experiment, so I could only 
mark them to treatment with VIE tags. I was wondering if anyone had any 
suggestions on how to 
analyze such group data. Is it legitimate to compare average initial weight 
with average final weight? 

I have the lengths and weights at the onset of the experiment and at the end of 
the experiment. 40 
fish from each treatment group went into each stream (thus, 80 fish/stream, 
with 8 replicate 
streams) and the streams were closed systems. At the end of the experiment I 
drained each stream 
and measured (length and weight) the surviving fish.

Any insight would be excellent! Thanks so much.

Cheers,

John Winkowski

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