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Management of Introduced Fishes

This chapter explores the reasons for fish introductions, including increasing local food supplies, enhancing sport and commercial fishing, manipulating aquatic systems, and accidental introductions. It also examines the ecological impacts of these introductions, such as competition, disease, predator-prey interactions, and habitat modification. The chapter concludes with alternatives to introductions and guidelines for evaluating potential introductions.

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Management of Introduced Fishes

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  1. Management of Introduced Fishes Chapter 13

  2. Reasons for Fish Introductions • Increase local food supplies • Enhance sport & commercial fishing • Manipulate aquatic systems • Accidents

  3. Increase Local Food Supplies • Aquaculture • Problems: carps, tilapia • Native fishes already adapted to local conditions usually are ignored • Nonnative fishes escape into local waterways

  4. Enhance Sport & Commercial Fishing • “Introduced fish are superior to native forms” • Major approach to “solving” management problems in North America in late-1800s • Local fishes often considered unsuitable prey for the “sophisticated” angler

  5. Enhance Sport & Commercial Fishing • Led to worldwide distribution of common carp, rainbow and brown trouts, largemouth bass • Introductions now may be “admission of defeat in managing native species to meet existing needs” • Great Lakes problems (e.g., alewife)

  6. Enhance Sport & Commercial Fishing • Alewife invades in 1880s, overabundant by 1960s • Chinook salmon stocked to control alewife • $4.5 billion sport fishery, plus alewife control!!! • Chinook start reproducing, too few alewife, now what to do?

  7. Enhance Sport & Commercial Fishing • Introducing commercial species generally unsuccessful unless species is also a sport fish (lake trout) • Conflicts arise between user groups when demand becomes high

  8. Enhance Sport & Commercial Fishing • Introducing prey species like shads, golden shiner, smelt • Accelerate growth rates of adult predators • May compete directly with young predators for food, slowing their growth rate

  9. Manipulate Aquatic Systems • Biological control of aquatic pests • Mosquitoes, weeds, overabundant or stunted prey • Mosquitofish, grass carp, tiger muskie - problems

  10. Accidental Introductions • Bait-bucket transfers • Ballast water introductions

  11. Ecology ofSpecies Introductions • Competition - niche dimensions, niche compression, species packing, & island biogeography

  12. Ecology ofSpecies Introductions • If niches are all filled and cannot be further compressed, introduction will fail unless introduced species is superior competitor • Brown trout vs. brook trout

  13. Ecology ofSpecies Introductions • Disease introductions - accompany introduced species, and may have severe impact on native species • Whirling disease carried by exotic trout from Europe have destroyed rainbow, cutthroat trout populations in Rocky Mountain rivers

  14. Ecology ofSpecies Introductions • Disease carried by U.S. crayfish eliminated European crayfish from much of northern Europe

  15. Ecology ofSpecies Introductions • Predator-prey interactions - introduction of predator can have dramatic, unexpected consequences on prey community • Introduction of Nile perch to Lake Victoria virtually eliminated 300 species of cichlids and 40 species of non-cichlids

  16. Ecology ofSpecies Introductions • Indirect effects - trophic cascade and habitat modification • Introductions can cause complex, often unpredictable effects on organisms throughout food web (e.g., opossum shrimp introduction led to increased bald eagle mortality)

  17. Ecology ofSpecies Introductions • Opossum shrimp intended for kokanee salmon and cutthroat trout in Flathead Lake, MT • Competed with salmon for zooplankton --- fewer salmon --- fewer post-spawn salmon for bears & eagles --- eagles scavenging road-kills --- cars kill eagles

  18. Ecology ofSpecies Introductions • Hybridization - introduced species crossbreed with closely related native species • Elimination of native cutthroat trout by rainbow trout in Great Basin of western U.S.

  19. Alternatives to Introductions • Use of native species • Better water management • Habitat protection • Use of sterile fishes - triploid, single-sex introductions into highly disturbed or artificial habitats

  20. Evaluating Potential Introductions • Guidelines (pp. 367-368) to insure that the system and all potential impacts of the introduction are understood before the introduction occurs

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