Optimal strategy for invasive species control to ensure survival and recovery of Atlantic Whitefish in the Petite Rivière lakes

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Language of the publication
English
Date
2024
Type
Report
Author(s)
  • Canadian Science Advisory Secretariat
  • Canada. Department of Fisheries and Oceans. Maritimes Region
Publisher
Center for Science Advice (CSA), Maritimes Region, Fisheries and Oceans Canada, Bedford Institute of Oceanography

Alternative title

Invasive species control in Petite Rivière watershed

Abstract

Over three years (2014-2016), 2,362 Smallmouth Bass and 3,129 Chain Pickerel were removed from Hebb Lake by boat electrofishing and angling methods. The proportion of the total population represented by these removals is unknown as there are no estimates of total population size for either species. Boat electrofishing depletion experiments demonstrated that localized populations of both Smallmouth Bass and Chain Pickerel could be dramatically reduced using a multi-pass methodology. However, depletion methods were found to be time consuming, and permitted limited shoreline coverage. Catch per unit effort (CPUE) efficiency decreased with consecutive passes. The effect of depletion removals is assumed to be temporary, as the site is likely quickly recolonized by individuals from unfished areas adjacent to the depletion site. Boat electrofishing linear transects were applied to increase total lake shoreline coverage. Removals in this case are primarily juveniles. Angling targeted at invasive species removal was applied as a supplementary control technique. Angling generally selected for larger fish than boat electrofishing. Eradication of invasive species is considered unlikely using boat electrofishing and angling methods, however control of the population may be achievable with ongoing effort. Other studies using boat electrofishing have been successful at controlling Smallmouth Bass abundance, albeit with much higher levels of electrofishing effort applied to smaller lakes. Once mitigation effort is removed, it is expected the population would quickly rebound.

Description

1 online resource (21 pages) : illustrations, maps, charts

Subject

  • Biological diversity,
  • Nature and environment,
  • Water

Pagination

21 pages

Identifiers

Government document number
Fs70-6/2024-045E-PDF
ISBN
97806607299169780660729916
ISSN
1919-5087

Report

Report no.
2024/045
Series title
Science Advisory Report (Canadian Science Advisory Secretariat)

Citation(s)

DFO. 2024. Optimal Strategy for Invasive Species Control to Ensure Survival and Recovery of Atlantic Whitefish in the Petite Rivière Lakes. DFO Can. Sci. Advis. Sec. Sci. Advis. Rep. 2024/045.

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Collection(s)

Fisheries

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