Balancing Fisheries Management and Water Uses for Impounded River Systems

A Survey of Fishery Agency Supplementary Largemouth Bass Stocking Practices in Large United States Reservoirs

Michael J. Siepker and Michelle Casto-Yerty

doi: https://doi.org/10.47886/9781934874066.ch28

Abstract.—Thirteen United States fishery agencies utilized routine supplemental stocking as a means to manage largemouth bass Micropterus salmoides populations in large (>405-ha) reservoirs. State agencies stocking largemouth bass used two strains (i.e., northern and Florida) as well as intergrades. Largemouth bass for stocking were raised in hatcheries, lakeside nursery ponds, or both. Among states, methods used to monitor fish in hatchery ponds and lakeside nursery ponds, the date ponds were drained, and methods to enumerate fish from the ponds varied. Although most states cited bolstering weak year-classes as their main reason for routine stocking, others noted increasing genetic variability within populations and public pressure as reasons that their agencies stocked large reservoirs with largemouth bass. As agencies continue to respond to public pressures for larger fish, they should consider the possible consequences of mixing stocks of largemouth bass. With continued development of agency rearing techniques, especially in lakeside nursery ponds, methods to enumerate fish should be considered to aid in future stocking evaluations. Improved rearing and stocking techniques will allow fisheries managers to utilize resource dollars in a way that provides benefit to anglers while ensuring the sustainability of largemouth bass populations.