Physiological Response of Largemouth Bass to Angling Stress

  • Gustaveson A
  • Wydoski R
  • Wedemeyer G
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Abstract

Abstract The physiological effects of catch-and-release fishing on largemouth bass Micropterus salmoides from Lake Powell and Mantua Reservoir, Utah, were evaluated, and an estimate of the time needed for recovery from hooking stress was obtained. Fatigue in Lake Powell fish, as indicated by elevated blood lactate, was directly proportional to hooking time (1–5 min) and water temperature, but recovery from the hyperlacticemia was relatively rapid (about 24 h). Hyperglycemia, an indicator of stress hormone production, did not occur in largemouth bass hooked and played for 1–5 min in the coldest water (11–13°C), was moderate in fish hooked and played at l6–20°C, and was severe in fish played for 5 min at 28–30°C. Fish held for recovery in live cages suffered further hyperglycemia, presumably because of the stress of confinement. Ionoregulation, as indicated by relatively stable plasma chloride values, was not immediately affected in largemouth bass caught at water temperatures of 11–13°C or 28–30°C, but an ...

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APA

Gustaveson, A. W., Wydoski, R. S., & Wedemeyer, G. A. (1991). Physiological Response of Largemouth Bass to Angling Stress. Transactions of the American Fisheries Society, 120(5), 629–636. https://doi.org/10.1577/1548-8659(1991)120<0629:prolbt>2.3.co;2

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