New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research abstracts
Habitat preferences of shortfinned eels (Anguilla australis), in two
New Zealand lowland lakes
D. J. JELLYMAN
National Institute of Water & Atmospheric
Research Ltd
P. O. Box 8602
Christchurch, New Zealand
email: d.jellyman@niwa.cri.nz
B. L. CHISNALL
National Institute of Water & Atmospheric
Research Ltd
P. O. Box 11 115
Hamilton, New Zealand
Abstract The habitats used by shortfinned eels (
Anguilla
australis (Richardson)) in Lakes Ellesmere (Canterbury) and Waahi
(Waikato), New Zealand, were determined using a variety of capture techniques
during the summers of 1994/95-1997/98. The most successful technique used to
catch juvenile eels (<300 mm total length (TL)) in Lake Ellesmere was a
2-m wide beam trawl; larger eels were captured mainly by fine-meshed fyke nets.
Trawl catches during the night exceeded catches during the day by a factor of
2.4. In Lake Ellesmere, juvenile eels were mainly caught in the depth range
0.6-1.2 m, on a gravel and/or mud substrate, and within 1 km of the
shore. In contrast, larger eels (>=300 mm) preferred sandy substrates,
but showed no marked preference for particular depths or distances offshore.
The spatial distribution of both size groups was non-random. Although water
temperature did not influence catch rates (CPUE, catch-per-unit-effort) of
either size group, catches of the smaller eels were greater during the new moon
phase than during the other phases--catches of larger eels were unaffected by
lunar phase. Length-frequency distributions of eels from Lake Ellesmere were
strongly bimodal, with eels 200-300 mm poorly represented--this probably
reflects poor recruitment for several years, either because lake opening times
did not coincide with the availability of glass eels, or because overall
numbers of glass eels were low. Juvenile eels in Lake Waahi, caught in
fine-meshed fyke nets and in special brush collectors, were also inshore
residents; unlike Lake Ellesmere, juvenile eels could be caught at the lake
margins, probably because Lake Waahi is not subject to the same wind-induced
water level fluctuations as Lake Ellesmere. Recruitment into Lake Waahi
commenced in mid December, but there was evidence of low recruitment in past
years for this lake also. An important outcome of this research is that
estimates of the number of juvenile eels to be transplanted during stocking
programmes should be made using the area of the shallow littoral rather than
the area of the whole lake.
Keywords habitat utilisation; shortfinned eels; Anguilla
australis; lowland lakes; substrate; depth; spatial distribution; lunar
phase; water temperature
M98068
Received 22 September 1998; accepted 15 December 1998
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