2012
DOI: 10.1111/jai.12078
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Comparison of growth and condition of European eels stocked as glass and farm sourced eels in lakes in the first 4 years after stocking

Abstract: Summary European glass eels Anguilla anguilla showed a better overall performance of growth and condition compared to farm sourced eels after stocking in six isolated lakes within a 4‐year study period. It can be concluded that the stocked farm sourced eels needed a longer period to switch from artificial food to natural prey and to adapt to new foraging strategies.

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Cited by 33 publications
(43 citation statements)
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“…Farm eels may need adaptation time to use natural food (Simon et al 2013) during which they consume less food and fewer prey types compared with wild fish as described by other fish species (Sosiak et al 1979;Ersbak & Haase 1983;Sundstr€ om & Johnsson 2001). Furthermore, it cannot be excluded that non-or slowgrowing eels were sorted out in the eel farms after size grading and subsequently sold as stocking material.…”
Section: Stocking Form Lakementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Farm eels may need adaptation time to use natural food (Simon et al 2013) during which they consume less food and fewer prey types compared with wild fish as described by other fish species (Sosiak et al 1979;Ersbak & Haase 1983;Sundstr€ om & Johnsson 2001). Furthermore, it cannot be excluded that non-or slowgrowing eels were sorted out in the eel farms after size grading and subsequently sold as stocking material.…”
Section: Stocking Form Lakementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Annual length increments under different environmental factors, age and size class were estimated for naturally recruited elvers as 38-91 mm, stocked elvers as 51-83 mm and stocked farm eels as 25-65 mm (Bisgaard & Pedersen 1991;Pedersen 1998;Lin et al 2007;Simon et al 2013). Furthermore, the recapture of cultured eel was lower than of wild eel in a river and a lake 1 and 7 years after stocking (Bisgaard & Pedersen 1991;Pedersen 2000).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The low recapture rate is a general problem on glass eel studies (Simon and Do¨rner, 2014) and the catch rate rises with increasing age and size (Naismith and Knights, 1990;Lambert et al, 1994;Simon et al, 2013). The number of stocked glass eels recaptured by electrofishing 1 year following stocking at elver stage was low in the three streams probably due to this issue of small amount of glass eel stocked, the size of the individuals (median length, 9 cm) and the low efficiency of electric fishing for this life stage.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The annual length increases and survival rates in the stocked eels vary strongly between the stocking environments, the stocking materials (farm and glass eels), the stages (smaller and larger eels) and times after stocking (Bisgaard and Pedersen, 1991;Pedersen, 1998;Lin et al, 2007;Simon et al, 2013;Simon and Do¨rner, 2014). In stocked (Pedersen, 2009;Simon et al, 2013) and non-stocked (Naismith and Knights, 1990;Lambert et al, 1994) eels, the recapture rates improved with increasing age and size. In most studies, the combination of deep environments with the small size of glass eel make recaptures ineffective and complicate the monitoring of restocked individuals (Lambert et al, 1994), especially the first year after stocking.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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