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Thread Like Summary
4CornersPuddle, azteca, FishinRod, H20fwler
Total Likes: 12
Original Post (Thread Starter)
#467372 03/22/2017 3:47 PM
by azteca
azteca
Hello.

I want to know if the eggs of the Perch can be transported to a pond by a bird or a Raccoon, if the eggs stick on them by a rainy night.

Also what types of fish can be bring by the birds.

I know it's funny question to ask

A+
Liked Replies
#563855 Jan 26th a 07:31 PM
by Tinylake
Tinylake
This is an interesting topic! If there's one thing I've come to understand is that pretty much nothing is impossible and....sometimes the answers to mans questions are the simplest.

My experiences.

I've built ponds with no incoming or outgoing water (spring fed) and within 2 or 3 weeks there are minnows in it. The only sign of life I see during the early growth (first few weeks) are raccoons, mink, herons, frogs, turtles and puddle ducks. I have one tiny pond that is about 12 feet round and it is one of my best minnow growing ponds.

I've also seen snapping turtles with leeches on their backs with fresh mud travelling from pond to pond.

We have many birds of prey and I've seen a fish fall out their grip..in another pond.

While in the arctic we flew some biologists into landlocked lakes to study char and trout...they could have been located by higher water levels or.....?

And a pond/swamp I trap often (about 10 acres wide and 6 feet deep) was drained by some otters, in the end there were thousands of max 4 inch long sunfish, private property in the same family since the 1800's and no oral history of it ever being stocked. There is nothing above that pond for them to come from and there is no way they could have swam up to that swamp.

My remote cabin in Quebec has walled in it...many of them, those were brought in by one fella in a backpack in the 1950's, its the best walleye lake I've ever fished.

Just my experiences.

Cheers.

Lou
4 members like this
#563851 Jan 26th a 06:39 PM
by azteca
azteca
Hello.

To fuel discussion for fun.
From Audubon.

https://www.audubon.org/news/mallards-ferry-fish-eggs-between-waterbodies-through-their-poop
A+
2 members like this
#563854 Jan 26th a 06:52 PM
by FishinRod
FishinRod
Wow, azteca's new link is based on direct experimental evidence.

I would NOT have guessed that fish eggs would remain viable passing through the digestive system of a duck. However, ducks and geese do seem to possess inefficient, high-bypass digestive systems.

If we don't want invasive fish species in our ponds, does that mean we will all need to deploy hyperactive Labrador Retrievers to protect our waters?
2 members like this
#563791 Jan 25th a 05:15 AM
by Snipe
Snipe
How can isolated lakes, deprived of access to a watercourse, teem with fish?

FRANCE MEDIA AGENCY
Wednesday, March 22, 2023 3:04 p.m.

UPDATE Wednesday, March 22, 2023 3:04 p.m.

A true stowaway, the common perch, a freshwater fish very common in Europe, colonizes lakes with the transport of its eggs by ducks, according to a study published in Biology Letters on Wednesday.

How can isolated lakes, deprived of access to a watercourse, still teem with fish? Charles Darwin had suggested a clue when he noticed that mollusc larvae attached themselves to the legs of a duck, before assuming that they could survive the flight leading them to a new body of water to colonize.

Avian zoochory

Experiments, most of them recent, have explored the process of avian zoochory, by which living organisms play stowaways from one place to another, on the feathers or even in the stomach of a bird.


The study carried out by doctoral student Flavien Garcia and his colleagues from the Evolution and Biological Diversity Laboratory at the University of Toulouse III, with the help of an American professor of aquatic biology, is the first to seek proof of this in the field.

More precisely in a set of gravel lakes in Haute-Garonne, in the south-west of France. Typically, these flooded quarries are operated by companies and closed strictly to the public. Once their resources are exhausted, after ten or fifteen years, they are then generally opened to him.

Biologists examined 37 of them, a third of which were still closed and inaccessible to anglers. All these lakes had a population mainly composed of common perch.

The study first ruled out a possible source of “colonization” of these bodies of water through the habit of angling enthusiasts to populate them with fish, to better hook them.

Gravel pit managers have ruled out any introduction of fish into their operation. As for lakes open to the public, fishermen who confessed to wild releases of fry admitted to doing so with more sporty species, such as trout perch or carp.

Fish roe as an appetizer

Another observation excluding human intervention is based on the genetic analysis of more than 500 perch. The artificial introduction of perch should result in greater genetic diversity of the species in lakes open to fishing... However, it is approximately equal to that of gravel pits closed to the public.

Other “lines of evidence” support the role of birds in colonization, particularly the mallard duck. “There is a synchrony between the time of perch spawning and a period of high duck abundance,” notes Flavien Garcia.

The mallard and the Coot, a moorhen, populate the lakes until the end of their wintering period, in February. Precisely during the reproduction period of the common perch, which needs very cold water for its spawning, between 8 and 10 degrees Celsius.

Its eggs, as tiny as they are innumerable, extend into long gelatinous ribbons that can reach up to five feet. Adhering, at water level, to plants and stones, they can easily stick to the legs or feathers of ducks. Or even end up as an aperitif in their throats.

However, recent experiments have shown that fish eggs can survive the intestinal transit of their host...

Genetic analysis provides another clue, with a link between the geographical proximity of the lakes and the genetic proximity of the perch that live there. Researchers have even identified “first generation migrants,” explains Mr. Garcia. That is to say “perch whose genotype belongs to that of the population of another lake”.

Furthermore, half of lake colonizations take place over a distance of less than 2 km. The same one that ducks usually cover.

The only missing evidence is the ability of the perch egg to survive the digestion of the mallard. It would require a “practically and ethically complicated” experiment, says Mr. Garcia, including sacrificing the animals to examine their digestive tract.
1 member likes this
#563848 Jan 26th a 05:51 PM
by canyoncreek
canyoncreek
as far as the never ending speculation about how fish get in empty bodies of water I still can't understand why we just keep passing on the old assumptions and theories when they don't make much sense. I guess each can have their own favorite theory, but this forum has members gifted in biology, in research, in mathematics, and in the standard scientific method or hypotheses, experimentation and conclusion.

It is crazy that we still just say that eggs stick to raccoon legs or bird feathers and figure we must have hit a home run on solving that question.

We should be way beyond just speculation with our current ability to set up and control experiments and separate the speculation cause from the real cause. Cameras are cheap and can be setup with convenient cell phone connections.

It seems like 10 people could set up 10 small depressions in the ground (or 5 people could set up 2 each) and be sure the only source of water able to get into the depression would be from the sky. Assuming a newly created dug out area with no water and no fish. Add chlorinated water if one wanted to be sure there wasn't any fish eggs in the tap water (now that is an interesting concept not mentioned in the articles above). Then set up a camera to monitor 24x7.

If no stork, duck or other bird lands in the water then you have proven the concept. If no raccoon takes a drink or possum or other animal then we can't blame then. If no water comes over land in a runoff event then that takes care of that idea. If a month or two goes by and suddenly there are fish in there then we have to go back to hypothesizing how fish get in there. If several months go by and no fish show up then we can say that not all ponds will self-stock themselves with fish like is commonly put forth.

It is in a way nice to know that somehow fish will find their way into any new body of water and I as much as anyone am curious about how, but to say eggs are sticky, and they jump on to animal legs, and they survive the hike or the flight over to the next pond and then they jump off as soon as they feel they are in their new home, and then they go back to a nest in the new pond and finish hatching... I just don't know.

But again, that is more just for discussion and not to say that I have the answers. I just feel we can use the same scientific method to set up some simple scenarios to shed light on the question.

What if we found out that there was really a modern day Johnny Appleseed who went around secretly stocking fish for us? Or that those big white trails or smoke we see across the sky (read online about the jet plane contrail controversy) are simply the government ejecting water streams and are stocking millions of fish which happen to land in every available puddle to spawn?

All in good fun of course. It is heartening for me to know that we don't know everything and there still is a mystery for us to marvel at even with all our advanced science and technology.
1 member likes this
#563872 Jan 27th a 09:43 PM
by H20fwler
H20fwler
Originally Posted by FishinRod
Originally Posted by H20fwler
I have had green sunfish and mosquito minnows just show up pretty fast in new ponds that I have dug, with no introduction of any fish on my part.
How did they get in there?

How did the WATER get there?

Is there any change a tiny portion of the water came from a water source containing fish?

Purely for discussion, I had just the opposite experience of yours this fall. I did some work by our creek and was getting eaten by mosquitos. I never get mosquitos down there because the creek is full of hungry Gambusia. However, our creek went dry this summer due to the drought. We did get some fall rains that raised the groundwater level. Eventually some of the low spots in the creek did fill with water percolating upwards from the creek bottom, but looking at the debris in the creek, it was obvious that the creek had never resumed flowing. I was working by one such pool and it had damn mosquito larva swimming in it. I sure look forward to my Gambusia coming back this spring!

Rain, ponds were dug in July during a dry spell in open field.

No ditch nearby with any moisture no puddles from a woods or low spots. Ponds were dug in what was a farm field rotated crop and tilled for at least the last 100 years.
Did see shore birds around ponds almost immediately after the rain. I sure didn't mind seeing mosquito fish show up but don't really care for green sunfish. Was just surprised at how fast they showed, almost before any plant life even started.
Nature is interesting.
1 member likes this
#564848 Mar 3rd a 07:25 PM
by esshup
esshup
Originally Posted by B storm
How do you sterilize ground water before digging a new pond as suggested ? Is it a total waste of time to try to avoid green sunfish ? I'm having a pond dug out that will be fed by watershed and water table when high enough. Neighbor has a small pond 1/2 mile away that has green sunfish in it.


IF the area that you are digging your pond in has standing water in it, I'd consider using hydrated lime to bring the pH up to 11, that will kill any fish.

Like FishingRod says, you don't have to sterilize ground water, just keep an eye on surface water. Fish can move from pond to pond in less than 1" flowing water (or standing water for that matter).
1 member likes this
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