Food Habits, Gastric Digestion and Food Consumption Rates of Yellow Perch, Perca Fluviatilis Flavescens (Mitchill) in West Blue Lake, Manitoba

Food Habits, Gastric Digestion and Food Consumption Rates of Yellow Perch, Perca Fluviatilis Flavescens (Mitchill) in West Blue Lake, Manitoba

Author: Melvyn Robert Falk

Publisher: 1971 [c1972]

Published: 1971

Total Pages: 350

ISBN-13:

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Food habits and rates of digestion and food consumption were determined for yellow perch in West Blue Lake, Manitoba during the spring and summer of 1969 and 1970. Perch were diurnal in both swimming and feeding activity. Composition and amount of food eaten by perch varied with time of day, season and size of fish. The greatest feeding activity generally occurred during mid-morning and early evening. Chaoborus sp pupae and cladocerans tended to be eaten in early morning and late evening while benthic organisms and fishes were eaten throughout the day. Seasonally, major components of the diet of adult perch were amphipods and immature aquatic insects in spring and early summer with fishes and crayfish predominating in late summer. For juvenile perch, cladocerans and amphipods were eaten in early and late summer with amphipods and fishes predominating in mid-summer. Weight of stomach contents increased with fish weight but not in a direct proportion. Cladocerans decreased in importance in the diet with increasing fish size while fishes and crayfish increased. Of the two species of amphipods in West Blue Lake, Gammarus lacustris tended to be eaten by adult perch while Hyalella azteca were eaten by juvenile perch... Amphipods formed the basic food item for perch in West Blue Lake, Cladocerans, immature dipterans, crayfish and fishes were of secondary importance while insects other than dipterans were of minor importance. Perch were classified as both secondary and tertiary consumers deriving approximately equal portions of their diet by weight from benthic and pelagic organisms (primary consumers) as well as from fishes (secondary consumers).


Growth, Mortality, Production and Feeding of Yellow Perch Fry, Perca Fluviatilis Flavescens (Mitchill) and Their Effect on the Daphnia Pulicaria Forbes of West Blue Lake

Growth, Mortality, Production and Feeding of Yellow Perch Fry, Perca Fluviatilis Flavescens (Mitchill) and Their Effect on the Daphnia Pulicaria Forbes of West Blue Lake

Author: Michael A. Henderson

Publisher:

Published: 1976

Total Pages: 270

ISBN-13:

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Distribution, mortality, growth, production and feeding habits of perch fry and their effect on the Daphnia pulicaria population of West Blue Lake was investigated. Perch hatched in the littoral zone in early June and moved into the pelagic zone 7 to 14 days later when they were 9 - l0 mm in length. Perch fry remained in the pelagic zone until they reached a length of approximately 25 - 30 mm in mid-July, and then returned to the littoral area. Instantaneous daily mortality rates ranged from .017 in areas of low perch fry abundance to .140 in areas of high perch fry abundance. From hatching until mid-August perch fry increased in length and dry weight by a factor of 10 and 2616 respectively. Growth occurred in two distinct stanzas. The first stanza, from hatching until the beginning of the pelagic phase, was characterized by a low level of feeding and a slow growth rate, while the second stanza, lasting for the remainder of the summer, was characterized by a high level of feeding and a fast growth rate. Variation in the energy intake and growth of perch fry in different parts of the lake was directly dependent upon the abundance of Dacphnia pulicaria-...Decreases in the abundance of Daphnia pulicaria in areas of the lake with low numbers of perch fry indicated that these populations may decline independently of fish predation...