Use of larval stocking in restoration of Chesapeake Bay striped bass
Author(s) -
David H. Secor
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
ices journal of marine science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.348
H-Index - 117
eISSN - 1095-9289
pISSN - 1054-3139
DOI - 10.1006/jmsc.1997.9996
Subject(s) - hatchery , stocking , biology , fishery , juvenile , bass (fish) , chesapeake bay , larva , morone saxatilis , zoology , estuary , ecology , fish <actinopterygii>
After the collapse of striped bass Morone saxatilis stocks in the late 1970s, hatchery programs and release experiments were instituted to evaluate the potential to restore striped bass in Chesapeake Bay. Because survival of striped bass larvae to first feeding (7 d after hatch) is low in Chesapeake tributaries, ranging from 0.2 to 5.2% of eggs spawned, it is possible to enhance survival through hatchery propagation of eggs and yolk-sac larvae, and it may be feasible to supplement recruitment by stocking post-yolk-sac larvae. During 1991-1993, otoliths of 31.7 million hatchery-produced striped bass larvae (5-13 d after hatch) were chemically marked and released into two tributaries of Chesapeake Bay. In years of moderate to poor natural larval production (1991, 1992), stocked larvae contributed 20 to 30% to overall juvenile abundance. In 1993, a year of high natural production, stocked larvae contributed only 5% to juvenile abundance, although numbers contributed were higher than in previous years. Using field and hatchery estimates of larval and juvenile growth and mortality, enhancement strategies were compared in which fish were released at three different ages: larvae (7 d post-hatch), summer-stocked juveniles (55 d post-hatch), or fall-stocked juveniles (220 d post-hatch). Based upon hatchery records, reared larvae and juveniles experienced substantially higher rates of growth and survival than did wild larvae and juveniles of similar age. In years of low natural egg production, cohort biomass at 220 d post-hatch was highest when juveniles were stocked in summer or fall. When approximate costs were incorporated into the analysis, the efficacy of stocking 7-d-old larvae was higher than summer and fall stocking of juveniles if stocked larvae encountered favourable conditions. In years of poor natural recruitment, stocking post yolk-sac larvae into estuarine tributaries could supplement stocks of striped bass and possibly other anadromous species which experience high embryo and yolk-sac larva mortality.
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