Mortality rates of early developmental stages of freshwater drum Zigler, S. J., and C. A. Jennings. 1993. Mortality rates of early developmental stages of freshwater drum and sunfish in the Upper Mississippi River System. Contract report by the National Biological Survey, National Fisheries Research Center, La Crosse, Wisconsin, for the National Biological Survey, Environmental Management Technical Center, Onalaska, Wisconsin, December 1993. EMTC 93-S019. 34 pp. + Appendix A. (NTIS #PB94-149978) ABSTRACT Larval fish were sampled with plankton nets at two backwater and two main channel stations in Pool 8 in 1990, and at one main channel and one backwater station in Pools 8 and 14 in 1989 (four stations each year). Growth of sunfish (Lepomis spp.) and freshwater drum (Aplodinotus grunniens) was estimated with a length-based method and an otolith-based method. For each method, instantaneous mortality was estimated by regressing the natural logarithm of fish catch for each 1-mm size group against the group's estimated age. For freshwater drum, length-based and otolith-based estimates of mortality were similar at three of four main channel stations. However, for larval sunfish, the otolith-based method provided more precise estimates of growth than the length-based method at two of three stations. Estimates of mortality were similar for both methods in Pool 14, where catches were higher, but the length-based method gave significantly higher estimates in Pool 8, where the catches were lower. Both length-based and otolith-based methods can effectively estimate larval fish growth and mortality, but each may be more appropriate for certain situations. Length-based methods require large catches to produce reliable estimates, but are less labor intensive than the otolith-based method. KEYWORDS mortality, growth, sunfish, freshwater drum, larval fish, Mississippi River