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Important fish families

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diverts young fish to agricultural fields ... ex: near disappearance of mayfly nymphs in Lake Erie. low DO concentrations in the water column ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Important fish families


1
Fish and Fisheries Management
  • Important fish families
  • Methods of collection and study
  • Fish interactions
  • Important limnological measurements to fisheries
    studies
  • Water development and pollution Effects
  • Fisheries management

2
Historical neglect of fish by limnologists,
partly because
  • Fisheries biology historically an applied
    science but has developed considerable basic
    theory
  • Early limnologists tended to neglect fish but
    this has changed, esp. in recent years
  • Commercial and recreational importance of fish
    requires management skills

3
An integrated approach between fish biologist and
limnologists is necessary because
  • Fish yield is a function of whole lake processes
  • Fish can also alter the structure and function of
    primary and secondary lake components
  • Fish can degrade or improve water quality
  • Many native fish stocks are endangered

4
Review of Important Families of Fish (Class
Osteichthyes)
  • Acipenseridae sturgeon
  • Catostomidae suckers
  • Centrarchidae bass, sunfish
  • Clupeidae shad, herring
  • Coregonidae whitefish
  • Cyprinidae minnows and carp
  • Esocidae pike
  • Percidae perch, walleye, saueger
  • Petromyzontidae lampreys
  • Ictaluridae catfish
  • Salmonidae salmon, trout
  • Amidae bow fin, gars

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Anadromous vs. Catadromous
  • Andromous fish spawn in rivers and mature in the
    sea
  • ex salmon, steelhead trout
  • Catadromous fish spawn in the sea and mature in
    rivers
  • ex American eel

14
Methods of Collection and Study
  • Fish toxicants
  • ex rotenone Lake Davis problem
  • Netting
  • gill netting
  • seining
  • trammel netting
  • fyke nets
  • trawl nets

15
  • Electro-fishing
  • must have sufficient salinity!
  • AC or DC current
  • Hook and line fishing
  • Can include catch and release (non-destructive
    method
  • SCUBA for fish observation

16
Population Census Methods
  • Creel
  • Mark and recapture tagging (now electronic)
  • Direct count
  • Echo sounding
  • Catch per unit effort
  • Weirs
  • Towers

17
Interaction of fish with other lake components
and each other
  • Direct effects of grazing
  • size selective predation
  • Indirect effects of grazing
  • selective grazing alters zooplankton community
    which in turn alters phytoplankton community
    (Brooks and Dodson, 1965 Carpenter, Kitchel, and
    Elser)

18
  • Nutrient Recycling and transport by fish
  • ex P transfer from the littoral to pelagic zone
    (Schlindler et. al, 1996)
  • Predation on other fish
  • varies with life stage
  • ex Pike, Bass
  • Predation on insects
  • ex Gambusia (mosquitoes)
  • Lepidophagy
  • feeding on the scales of other fish
  • ex an Amazonian fish

19
Importance of Limnological Measurements to
Fisheries Studies
  • Relationship of fish yield to primary
    productivity
  • Goldman Mo and Castle Lake trout
  • Edmondson Bear Lake fertilization
  • Stockner Salmon Lake fertilization by aircraft
  • Primary productivity measurements used to predict
    fish yield

20
Effects of Water Development and Pollution on
Fisheries
  • Dams
  • converts riverine areas to impoundments
  • obstruct migration to original spawning sites
    (guided by olfactory senses)
  • juveniles may have trouble going downstream
  • May eliminate survival of the fittest when
    hatcheries attempt to maintain fish runs
  • temperature of released water
  • timing of water releases

21
  • Irrigation
  • reduces water in streams
  • diverts young fish to agricultural fields
  • decreases lake levels in summer and endangers
    fish stocks
  • - ex Klamath Lake
  • Channelization
  • ex St. Lawrence waterway development allowed
    invasion of sea lamprey Petromizon marinus into
    the Great Lakes ? destroyed commercial lake trout
    fisheries
  • stream channelization speeds summer runoff and
    leads to dry stream beds

22
  • Increased Eutrophication
  • balanced fertilization can increase fish
    production, BUT
  • oxygen depletion in deep water ? loss of spawning
    grounds and benthic invertebrates, an important
    fish food source
  • ex near disappearance of mayfly nymphs in Lake
    Erie
  • low DO concentrations in the water column
  • most freshwater fish need a minimum constant DO
    concentration of 5 mg/L
  • ex Stockton sewage discharge lowered DO to 5
    mg/L and formed a chemical block to migrating
    salmon

23
  • Thermal pollution or enhancement
  • thermal enhancement
  • higher temperatures can speed growth
  • decline in fisheries
  • stenothermal fish, like trout, will not withstand
    the higher temperatures
  • more susceptible to chemical toxicity faster
    metabolic uptake of toxins
  • increased parasite and fungal infections
  • decreased DO concentration capacity
  • ? temperature ? DO solubility

24
  • Chemical pollution
  • pH changes
  • pesticides
  • some biomagnify up the food chain
  • detergents
  • removes protective fish slime making them less
    resistant to fungal infections
  • industrial wastes
  • ex methyl alcohol, silver in Silicon Valley
  • heavy metal pollution
  • ex Hg, Pb, Cd, Cu, and Zn
  • agricultural runoff
  • often high in pesticides and fertilizers

25
  • Logging
  • erosion and sedimentation ? destruction of
    spawning grounds
  • loss of riparian habitat ? less shading ? higher
    temperatures, loss of allochtonous inputs
  • rotting logs ? depletion of DO conc.
  • Landslides, mudslides
  • ex Lake Baikals omul most imp. commercial
    fish
  • spawning streams used for log flotation 10 of
    the logs sinks ? reduction in feeding and
    breeding habitats

26
Fisheries Management Methods for Increasing
Sustaining Yield
  • Fertilization
  • ex Mo addition to Castle Lake
  • Fish stocking
  • ex intensive trout stocking to high Sierra Lakes
  • Habitat improvements
  • ex brush piles in lakes, cleaning of spawning
    gravel, pool and riffle management, dam release
    water temperature control

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  • Restricted harvest
  • size limitation for juvenile or adult fish
  • ex sturgeon
  • Hybridization centrarchids and char
  • often sterile
  • tend to be very aggressive
  • grow bigger and faster ? better food conversion
  • tend not to overpopulate
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