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Bass study on Pinellas County’s Lake
Seminole receives second stocking
May 27, 2008
Contact: Bill Pouder, 863-648-3200
The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation
Commission (FWC) will stock 19,000 hatchery-reared largemouth
bass, implanted with coded wire tags, in Pinellas County’s Lake
Seminole May 28. The lake is the scene of a unique research
project that compares growth and survivability rates of stocked
bass with those of wild largemouths.
Last fall, an initial stocking of 7,000 fish
took place in the 700-acre lake. The study will compare survival
rates between the fall and spring stocking. The information will
help guide future management decisions on the lake.
“The ultimate goal of the study is to improve
the survival rate of hatchery-reared largemouth bass, while
enhancing the lake’s fishery,” said Bill Pouder, FWC fisheries
biologist. “Our studies indicate Lake Seminole has a huge forage
base, capable of supporting a much larger bass population.”
The FWC and the University of Florida have teamed up for the
research project. FWC biologists will be sampling the lake and
measuring growth rates at predetermined intervals. A special
wand that can detect the tiny, metal tags will be used to
separate stocked bass from wild ones.
Bass for the study were produced at the FWC’s
Florida Bass Conservation Center, Richloam Fish Hatchery in
Webster. These fish are the same genetic strain of Florida
largemouth bass found locally, which also should aid in
improving survival. Stocked bass range in size from 2 to 4
inches.
Historically, largemouth bass have been cultured
to fingerling sizes and stocked when they reach about 1.5 inches
long. Stocking larger fish will enable them to feed on the high
abundance of prey in the lake, which should increase survival.
Because of fast growth rates of these bass, stocked fish should
be of harvestable size – about 14 inches – by next year.
In spite of the advantages of stocking larger
bass, producing them for stocking poses some significant
challenges. In the mid-1990s FWC fish hatcheries developed
techniques to train fingerling bass to eat commercial feeds.
Unfortunately, there were no commercial diets available that met
the specific nutritional needs of warm-water largemouths.
The FWC enlisted the help of Dr. Paul Cardeilhac with the
University of Florida, College of Veterinary Medicine in
Gainesville to develop a specific diet for hatchery-raised
Florida largemouth bass. This nutritional work with largemouth
bass represents the only work of its kind and ultimately may be
used at warm-water fish hatcheries throughout the United States.
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