Description
Yellow Perch, Walleye, and Sauger: Aspects of Ecology, Management, and Culture, 1st ed. 2021
Fish & Fisheries Series, Vol. 41
Coordinators: Bruner John Clay, DeBruyne Robin L.
Language: EnglishKeywords
Aquaculture; Ecology; Fisheries Management; Sauger; Walleye; Yellow Perch
Publication date: 11-2022
328 p. · 15.5x23.5 cm · Paperback
Publication date: 11-2021
328 p. · 15.5x23.5 cm · Hardback
Description
/li>Contents
/li>Biography
/li>Comment
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PART I. Yellow Perch (Perca flavescens).- Spawning Characteristics of Yellow Perch During Periods of Water Level Fluctuations in a Hydropower Reservoir.- A Comparison of Aquaculture Production Methods for Optimizing Production of Fingerling Yellow Perch (Perca flavescens).- Evaluation of a Statewide Yellow Perch Bag Limit for Michigan.- Distribution and Abundance of Pelagic Larval Yellow Perch in Lake St. Clair (USA/Canada) and Adjoining Waters.- PART II. Walleye (Stizostedion vitreum).- Using Genomic Data to Guide Walleye Management in the Great Lakes.- Walleye Larviculture in Water Reuse Aquaculture Systems.- Effects of Parasiticidal Hydrogen Peroxide Treatments on Walleye Hatching Success in a Recirculating System.- Seasonal Movement Patterns and Distribution of Walleye in a Central Appalachian Hydropower Reservoir.- Managing Tribal Fisheries and Employees on the Reservation.- Can You Hear Me Now? Design Considerations for Large Lake, Multispecies Telemetry Projects.- PART III. Sauger (Stizostedion canadense).- Sauger Restoration in the Upper Allegheny River Watershed, New York.- PART IV. Comparison of North American and European Percid Fisheries.- International Importance of Percids: Summary and Looking Forward.
John Clay Bruner, M.Sc., a past chair of the AFS NCD Walleye Technical Committee, authored the phylogeny of the Percidae chapter in the 2011 Biology, Management, and Culture of Walleye and Sauger, and the 2019 Type Specimens of Fossil Fishes: Catalogue of the University of Alberta Laboratory for Vertebrate Paleontology. He edited Wooding’s 1994 Lake, River & Sea-run Fishes of Canada. He has published on living and fossil Percidae, Catostomidae, and Pomacentridae.
Dr. Robin L. DeBruyne conducts fisheries research on the Great Lakes and other large-lake ecosystems on topics including predator-prey dynamics, population dynamics, effects of ecosystem changes, and has concentrated on fish early-life history and habitat restoration research in the St. Clair-Detroit River System and Lake Erie since 2012. In addition to serving as co-editor, she was the lead author on two of the book chapters.