Differences in the exploitation of bream in three shallow lake systems and their relation to water quality
Authored by WM Mooij, Egbert van Nes, EHRR Lammens
Date Published: 2002
DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2427.2002.01008.x
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Abstract
1. The development of bream populations, water transparency, chlorophyll-a concentration, extent of submerged vegetation and
densities of the zebra mussel, Dreissena polymorpha, were analysed in
three shallow eutrophic lake systems subject to different fish
management.
2. In Lake Veluwemeer, the bream population was reduced from c. 100 to
20 kg ha(-1) after 5 years of fishing. The mortality caused by the
fishery was estimated at 38 of bream >15 cm in addition to a 13 natural
mortality of bream >17 cm. The decline was followed by an expansion of
the Chara beds present in the shallow parts, an increase in water
transparency in the open-water zone, an increase in the density of zebra
mussels and a decrease in chlorophyll-a concentrations.
3. The newly created Lake Volkerak showed trends opposite to those in
Lake Veluwemeer. Bream colonised the lake in 1988 and reached a biomass
of c. 140 kg ha(-1) in 1998. The water transparency decreased from a
maximum of 3 m to c. 1 m and the chlorophyll-a concentration increased
from 5 to 45 mug L-1. Submerged vegetation colonised up to 20 of the
total lake area in the first 5 years after creation of the lake in 1987
but decreased to 10 as turbidity increased.
4. Seine fishery in the Frisian lake system did not appear to affect the
bream population despite annual catches as high as 40-50 kg ha(-1). The
estimated natural mortality of fish >15 cm was 15 and mortality by
fishery was 26\%. The high loss was apparently compensated by good
recruitment and high growth rates resulting from a c. 1 C higher water
temperature during the years when bream were removed by fishing. There
was only a slight decrease in chlorophyll-a concentrations and a slight
increase in water transparency.
5. The results of this study suggest that the effects of bream
exploitation in eutrophic lakes can vary depending on the efficiency of
the fishery, recruitment success and temperature regime. In the absence
of fishery, bream dominated the fish community in the study lakes and
apparently prevented D. polymorpha and submerged vegetation from
establishing because of physical disturbance, enhanced internal
P-loading and resettling of resuspended sediments.
Tags
invasion
River
Mussel dreissena-polymorpha
Zebra mussel
Biomanipulation
Erie