The dominant food items in striped bass,
Morone saxatillis (Walbaum), less than 70 mm in fork length were mysids in the York River samples and insects in those from the James River.
Stomach contents from larger striped bass were dominated by fish (Rork River) and decapod shrimp (James River). The primary
physical difference between collecting sites in these two rivers was salinity. Most James River collections were taken from
salinities of less than 5 ‰, whereas the majority of York River stations exceeded 10 ‰. The food of Rappahannock River striped
bass was more diverse than that of York and James populations, containing items in common with both. Salinities at Rappahannock
stations ranged from 1.5 to 14.5‰
Virginia Institute of Marine Science Contribution No. 321. Collections utilized in this study were obtained under Project
AFS-4-1, Anadromous Fish Act (P. L. 89–304), Bureau of Sport Fisheries and Wildlife.
A National Science Foundation—Undergraduate Research Participant at the Virginia Institute of Marine Science, summer 1968.