|
Killgore, K.J., J.P. Kirk, and J.W. Foltz, 1998. Response of Littoral
Fishes in Upper Lake Marion, South Carolina Following Hydrilla Control by
Triploid Grass Carp, US Army Corps of Engineers.
Reprinted from Journal of Aquatic Plant Management
(1998) 36(1): 82-87
Response of Littoral Fishes in Upper Lake Marion, South
Carolina Following Hydrilla Control by Triploid Grass Carp
Abstract
A seven-year study in upper Lake Marion, South
Carolina evaluated the response of fishes to hydrilla (Hydrilla verticillata (L.
f.) Royle) removal by triploid grass carp (Ctenopharyngodon idella Valenciennes).
A boat-mounted electroshocker was used to quantify relative abundance and
species composition of fishes at 10 permanent locations distributed throughout
the upper lake. A total of 16,306 fish representing 64 species were collected.
The taxonomically dominant family was Centrarchidae and the numerically dominant
family was Clupeidae. There were significant differences in catch between years
with high and low hydrilla coverage. Littoral fishes, especially Centrarchidae,
increased as hydrilla decreased from a maximum of 4,700 ha (approximately 50% of
the surface area) to less than 100 ha by 1994. Mean lengths of most littoral
species were similar during the study. Despite substantial declines in hydrilla,
other forms of cover persisted during the study
providing an intermediate level of structural complexity. Consequently, grass
carp effectively controlled hydrilla but did not create any detectable negative
effects on the littoral fish assemblage during the study.
Entire Paper
Contact: Jack Killgore, US Army Corps of Engineers,
Waterways Experiment Station, CEWES-ES-P, 3909 Halls Ferry Road, Vicksburg, MS
39180
Keywords: Hydrilla, Monitoring,
Aquatic_plant_management, Environmental_impacts,
Grass_carp
Product Type: Research,
Impact
User Type: Resource Management
|