INTERACTIONS BETWEEN WALLEYE AND LARGEMOUTH BASS IN A WEST TEXAS RESERVOIR
TIMOTHY WILLIAM SCHLAGENHAFT, B.S.
Lots of bass anglers fret about the stocking of walleye in many of our Indiana reservoirs, sometimes feeling that there is competition for similar resources between the two species. This study utilized ultrasonic telemetry to track largemouth bass and walleye in Lake Mackenzie, TX. Similar to our reservoirs, Lake Mackenzie stratifies in the summer, restricting available habitat of both species. The fish were tracked year round, and at various time points from dawn until dusk, and habit overlap was documented. Habitat classifications included brushy coves (BC), steep brushy shorelines (SBS), steep rocky shorelines (SRS), sloping sandy shorelines (SSS), and open water (OW).
As might be expected, largemouth bass were heavily cover oriented, in this case wood/brush being the predominant option. Even though it only represented 5.3% of the available cover, bass utilized brushy coves 61% of the time on a year round basis. If you add steep brushy shorelines as the next most utilized cover option (22%) by largemouth, you account for 83% of all largemouth spottings. To the contrary, walleye utilized steep rocky shorelines 49% of the time, and open water another 41% of the time.
On a seasonal basis, in the winter and spring, brushy coves accounted for 71-72% of all bass locations, with steep brushy shorelines accounting for another 20-21% of locations. In fall, bass used brushy coves (53%), steep brushy shorelines (27%), and steep rocky shorelines (14%). In summer, this changed to BC-30%, SRS-28%, SBS-19%, SSS-13%, and OW-10% of the time. In summer, bass were very spread out and utilized all cover types to a more even degree.
Comparitively, walleye in spring used OW-73%, and SRS-25% of the time. In summer, this changed to SRS-77% and OW-9%. Fall found walleye relocating a bit back to SRS-50% and OW-44%, while in winter, it again changed to OW-73%, and SRS-25%. It would appear that in this study, walleye avoided the same woody cover areas that bass preferred to utilize, instead selecting strongly for open water and steep rocky shorelines when available. During the summer when deeper water wasn't available due to thermocline limitations (oxygen availability), this forced many of the walleye into steep rocky shoreline areas.
In total, overlap rarely occurred, scoring 0.12 in spring and 0.20 in fall, and 0.09 in winter. Only in summer (0.51), when warmer waters restricted overall habitat use of all fishes was there much overlap. In those cases, it's still possible that diet differences would reduce actual competiton between the two fish species. Yearly overlap average score of 0.2 would again suggest not much competition between the two species over the course of the year.
Happy Thanksgiving To All
"Eat, drink, and be merry, for tomorrow we fish"
Here's wishing all readers and their families a Happy Thanksgiving. Since we're now less than 12 hours away from that most blatant day of commercialism, we'll tack 180 degrees and post a piece I received recently from reader/contributor Richard Ziert on stewardship of our resources:
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