The fishery in a pond or lake is a very dynamic system. In order to fully examine the relationship between the various species that are present, a detailed survey should be carried out. We employ various techniques to evaluate the fishery of a waterbody: electrofishing, seine netting, gill netting and trap netting. By using one or more of these sampling methods, we can determine whether your fishery is properly balanced or not. For those of you that have an existing well-balanced fishery and wish to manage for trophy bass or a thriving panfish population, we can tailor a program to meet your management goals. If you are drawing down your pond or lake for dredging, restoration, or maintenance we also offer fish removal services. We can remove and relocate the fish in your pond or lake so they are not lost.
Eelectrofishing
AEC utilizes electrofishing as a sampling method on water bodies ranging in size from small ponds to large lakes and reservoirs.
The main objectives of electrofishing are stock assessment, health surveys, tagging, and eliminating species.
Seine Sampling
Seine sampling is utilized to sample the smaller species in a fish population.
Proper Fish Management = Trophy Bass
Most ponds and lakes have problems with their fish populations such as slow growth rates and poor reproduction. Often these problems result from improper stocking and/or unregulated harvesting programs. AEC can assess your fish population to prepare a detailed survey. Upon completion of a survey, the data is used to develop a management program that will result in a healthier fish population.
Fish Management for Population Maintenance
A healthy body of water should maintain a self-sustaining and well balanced fish population without much intervention. Natural deaths throughout the year happen in any lake or pond no matter how healthy, but a number of underlying issues can cause fish kills that require intervention for fish management. Just a few are excess rain that creates high salinity, sewage runoff and disease. Since lakes and ponds are complex systems with a delicate balance of factors, rapid environmental changes can be a detriment to fish survival.
One of the most common causes of sudden fish kills is low levels of dissolved oxygen in the water. Most fish species need 1 mg/L at the absolute least, but oxygen content should stay at or above 4 mg/L if you want to optimize health and eliminate diseases related to stress. If levels drop too low for even a couple hours, your fish population could rapidly collapse. At AEC, we can monitor your lake or pond’s oxygen content and keep an eye on the four possible culprits for rapid declines :
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Rapid Pond Turnover
In regions with temperature fluctuation throughout the seasons, lakes and ponds stratify during the summer. This means that the colder water with higher density remains at the bottom of the body, and less dense, warmer water lingers at the top, close to the surface. The process of decomposition takes place in the cooler bottom, using up oxygen and leaving the bottom water void of it. When temperatures change, the water naturally turns over, which is usually not a problem.
Turnover becomes a problem if it happens too rapidly, for example, due to intense thunderstorms or other natural events. The oxygen-depleted water at the bottom mixes with the top water in such instances, causing fish kills. One common way to combat this problem is to install an aeration system that will prevent such dangerous conditions and keep the water properly de-stratified all year . Just ask, and AEC technicians will install one quickly and at a competitive price to protect your fish population.
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Bacterial Growth
Each time a plant dies, it releases nutrients into the water that feed bacteria, and growing bacteria populations can deplete the oxygen that fish need to survive. Part of our lake and pond fish management at AEC will be to ensure remediation of bacterial growth without upsetting the existing balance of your aquatic ecosystem. We’ll perform effective vegetation management to keep nuisance plants from multiplying bacteria.
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Overabundant Vegetation
Since aquatic flora at abundantly high levels can have the same effect as excessive algae on pond and lake oxygen levels, proper vegetation management goes hand-in-hand with effective fish management.
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Excessive Planktonic Algae Blooms
Heavy planktonic algae blooms can lead to oxygen loss. We’ll perform physical, biological or material intervention to keep your algae levels where they need to be for optimal health throughout the entire waterbody.