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Evidence of predatory control of yellow perch (<i>Perca flavescens</i>) recruitment in Lake Erie, U.S.A.
81
Citations
22
References
1993
Year
BiologyFishery AssessmentWalleye PredationNatural SciencesFishery ScienceEvolutionary BiologyPredator-prey InteractionLake ErieFishery ManagementPredatory ControlWestern Lake ErieYellow Perch
Predation can be a major factor in recruitment success of yellow perch ( Perca flavescens Mitchitl). Trawl catches of age‐0 yellow perch in western Lake Erie declined from 870·3 per trawling h in June to 3·3 per trawling h in late July 1988. Coincident with the decline in relative abundance of age‐0 yellow perch we found large numbers of age‐0 yellow perch in the stomachs of small walleyes ( Stizostedion vitreum Mitchill). From this evidence we hypothesized that predation by walleyes may have caused the demise of the 1988 year‐class of yellow perch. We used a population and bioenergetics modelling approach to estimate the impact of walleye predation on the abundance of age‐0 yellow perch. Modelling showed that 6·8 × 10 9 age‐0 yellow perch that had attained 18 mm total length ( t.l. ), were eaten by small (age‐2 and younger) walleye from June through July 1988. We estimated that walleye ate 28·4–89·7% of the yellow perch reaching 18 mm t.l. during 1988. The majority of this predation (77% of total) was by the abundant age‐2 cohort of walleyes. We concluded that, even in a large system such as Lake Erie, predation can play a major role in structuring year‐class strength of yellow perch and, thus, management of percid fisheries should be conducted on a fish‐community basis.
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