Mixed Strain
A mixed strain rainbow trout is a captive or stocked Oncorhynchus mykiss population produced by crossing, blending, or repeatedly exchanging fish from more than one hatchery strain. The label does not describe a single standardized breed; it usually means the ancestry may include domestic lines selected for growth, feed conversion, spawning season, disease resistance, or local performance. Fish may look like ordinary rainbow trout with a pink lateral band and dark spotting, though cultured groups can also include golden, albino, melanistic, or mottled individuals depending on the broodstock.
Farms, hatcheries, and private pond managers use mixed strains when dependable production matters more than preserving a named line. Management is the same as for other rainbow trout: cold, highly oxygenated water, careful stocking density, clean inflow, and a high-protein trout ration. Anyone buying fingerlings should ask about health testing, triploid status if relevant, and whether release or pond stocking is permitted locally, since mixed-strain fish are usually unsuitable for conservation or native-trout restoration work.
Colors: Albino, Black, Blue, Brown, Gold, Gray, Green, Leucistic, Melanistic, Mottled, Orange, Piebald, Red, Silver, Spotted, Striped, White, Wild Type, Yellow