YELLOW PERCH RESEARCH

Yellow Perch Project

A large decline in the number of yellow perch surviving their first year of life has caused a reduction in the number of perch in Lake Michigan. Annual surveys of young-of-the-year (YOY) perch using bottom trawls and beach seines in the fall are usually good indicators of the number of fish hatched in a given year that we can expect to see as adults in future years. The number of YOY perch captured lakewide has dropped dramatically since 1988.

The WDNR, along with other agencies and scientists, has used a variety of assessments to analyze the status of the current yellow perch population.  These assessments include 1) egg deposition; 2) spawning; 3) mid-water trawling assessment, 4) post-larval perch; 5) young-of-the-year (YOY); and 6) winter graded-mesh. In addition, several other studies have been conducted including an alewife stomach content study, a lakewide mark and recapture study and a reproductive status study.  These assessments are detailed below.

Yellow Perch Egg Deposition

Yellow perch egg masses were identified by SCUBA divers at sites that 1) attract spawners, 2) were likely to trap drifting egg masses or 3) were traditional spawning grounds. All egg masses along a 300 meter transect were counted.

The purposes for doing these dives was to identify sites where egg masses were found and to develop an index of relative annual egg densities. During the initial years of the survey, we found very few egg masses. In 1997, divers searched for eggs for 31 hours and 40 minutes and found a total of 9 egg masses on the transects or nets or 0.50 egg masses per 1000 square meters. In 1998, divers searched for 12 hours and 48 minutes and found 0 egg masses or 0.0 egg masses per 1000 square meters. However, after the females from the 1998 year-class matured we found good numbers of egg masses distributed on the Green Can Reef from 2001-2007.

 

Divers have observed few egg skeins since the late 2000s.  In 2010 weather and temperature patterns produced a very atypical spring and few ripe and spawning males were found during the perch spawning survey, which may have led to the small number of egg skeins found that year.  In 2012 egg skeins appeared to be well developed by early June, and therefore, we only conducted one day of diving.  Due to logistical and weather related issues, we were unable to conduct the dive survey in 2015 and 2016.  In 2017 and 2018 we completed one day of diving each year, and the results corroborated what we have been catching in both our graded mesh and spawning nets.  We saw 4 egg skeins in four dives in 2017 and 1 skein in 4 dives in 2018.

Yellow Perch Dive Summary

Year Diver Bottom Time (hrs) Egg masses found (#) Area covered (m2) # egg masses per 1000 m2
1997 31.4 9 18,000 0.50
1998 12.75 0 9,200 0.00
1999 N/A N/A N/A N/A
2000 1.10 8 4,225 1.89
2001 4.5 223 30,600 7.29
2002 8.0 573 49,701 11.53
2003 6.5 246 24,526 10.04
2004 4.75 1 21,760 0.046
2005 6.0 493 41,988 11.74
2006 5.3 339 30,065 11.27
2007 5.3 378 34,960 10.81
2008 6.3 15 28,800 0.52
2009 6.0 222 38,182 5.8
2010 5.3 84 45,987 1.83
2011 6.6 55 54,300 1.01
2012 2.5 37 18,027 2.05
2013 2.6 9 23,311 0.40
2014 2.6 21 20,700 1.01
2015 N/A N/A N/A N/A
2016 N/A N/A N/A N/A
2017 2.9 4 10,944 0.37
2018 4.17 1 13,376 0.075

Yellow Perch Spawning Assessment

The main objectives of the yellow perch spawning assessment are to collect information on spawning fish including length, weight, sex, condition; collect gametes for scientific studies; determine spawning sites and aid in any other lakewide studies such as tagging and toxicological analysis.

Perch tagging procedure Yellow perch spawning Yellow Perch

In Wisconsin, adult yellow perch have been sampled during the spawning period using 4×6-ft double-ended fyke nets with a 100-ft leader between the two double-throated pots (1997 – 1999), a 6×10 commercial double-ended fyke nets with a 500-ft leader (1998) and with standard 2 1/2 inch commercial gill net (1997) and WDNR graded mesh gill net (1997- present).

Since 1997 WDNR has used graded mesh gill nets to quantify the relative abundance of mature female perch in known spawning areas.  Nets are set overnight in various depths around the Green Can Reef off Milwaukee.  Over the last decade, the number of yellow perch captured during our spawning assessment has continued to decline.  In the early 2000s we sampled approximately 1,000-2,000 perch annually, but that number has dropped to a low of 5 perch in 2017 and 8 perch in 2018 despite gill net effort spread over several weeks.  This continuing trend in our surveys indicates a low abundance of adult yellow perch in Lake Michigan off Milwaukee.

Wisconsin’s Yellow Perch Spawning Assessment

Year # of males caught # of females caught # of unknowns caught Total caught Number tagged
1997 14,417 46 11 14,474 5,163
1998 4,285 229 0 4,514 1,328
1999 5,635 232 0 5,867 3,142
2000 754 132 0 915 0
2001 994 438 0 1,432 0
2002 1,645 167 0 1,812 0
2003 1,583 26 0 1,609 0
2004   997 144 0 1,141 0
2005 1,207 64 0 1,271 0
2006 1,580 161 0 1,741 0
2007 2,076 56 0 2,132 0
2008 209 117 0 326 0
2009 465 164 0 629 0
2010 486 130 0 616 0
2011 200 435 0 635 0
2012 112 35 0 147 0
2013 42 53 0 95 0
2014 24 27 0 51 0
2015 0 21 0 21 0
2016 4 32 0 36 0
2017 2 3 0 5 0
2018 0 8 0 8 0

After a thorough review comparing raw data with electronic and table summary data, minor changes have been made to this table and its summaries.

Young-of-the-Year Sampling

Young-of-the-year (YOY) yellow perch abundances have proven to be a relatively effective predictor of future year-class strength. To improve the utility of YOY abundances as a predictor, index stations were added to the Michigan shoreline where none existed before and were compared with the relative efficiencies of beach seines and bottom trawls, the two most commonly used types of gear, so that all agencies can contribute to lakewide abundance data. Until recently, YOY yellow perch have consistently appeared in shore seines in fall when littoral trawling has failed to find them. A review of work in inland lakes suggests that post-larval perch move nearshore during the day which emphasizes the need to trawl different depths nearshore to track movements of fish.

Beach Seines
In Wisconsin we use a 25 foot bag seine to sample index stations between Sheboygan (north) and Kenosha (south).  From 1989 through 2001 we sampled at 18-22 stations, but the number of stations was reduced to 14 starting in 2002 due to decreased lake levels, increased Cladophora, and access suitability.  Two 100 foot pulls are made directly toward shore or parallel to shore depending on wave conditions.  In 1989 we caught 18.2 yellow perch per unit of effort.  This number dropped to 0 in 1994.  It has remained low in most years, with the exception of 1998, 2002, 2005, 2007, 2008, 2010, and 2015.  Due to budget constraints, we did not conduct any YOY perch beach seining in 2017 but were able to resume that effort in 2018.

Catch Per Unit Effort of Yellow Perch in Wisconsin Beach Seines

1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000
18.2 10.9 1.0 0.8 0.0 0.7 0.03 0.05 3.02 0.0 0.02
2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018
0.01 1.3 0.1 0.4 39 0.02 34 3.1 0.12 11.0 0.1 0.49 0.12 0.16 3.79 0.05 0.05

Micromesh Gill Nets
In addition to the typical seine hauls, since 2002 Wisconsin DNR has used monofilament gill nets to increase sampling in nearshore waters. The protocol for this assessment has evolved over time, with changes in both the gill net mesh size as well as sampling locations.  The first gill nets consisted of 6.25 mm, 8 mm, 10 mm and 12 mm bar length mesh, each 10 feet long for a total of 40 feet per net.  In 2002 at least two sites were selected from each major port – Kenosha, Racine, Milwaukee, Port Washington and Sheboygan, and nets were fished overnight in 8-20 feet of water.  In 2003, Wind Point in Racine County and Doctors Park in Milwaukee County were chosen as index sites to sample annually, and the graded mesh nets were fished overnight in 5-10 feet of water.

From 2004 through 2007, mesh sizes varied but were in the range of 6 to 10 mm bar mesh in 100 foot long nets.  In 2008 we used the original 40 foot long graded mesh size nets along with 100 foot long nets of 12 mm stretch mesh.  The majority of YOY perch were captured in the 12 mm stretch mesh with few in the larger mesh sizes, so since 2009 we have used only the 100 foot long nets in 12 mm stretch mesh.

In 2010 we moved one of our index sites from the Wind Point lighthouse to Shoop Park.  The park is on the south side of Wind Point and offers better sampling conditions because it is somewhat better protected from the wind.  In 2013 we added one gill net set in South Shore Park in Milwaukee County, but no perch were caught so we did not return there again.  In 2016 we set at two additional sampling locations in Milwaukee County, off of St. Francis (south of the Milwaukee Harbor) and off of Bradford Beach (north of the Milwaukee Harbor).  YOY perch were caught at each location, but fewer off of St. Francis than Bradford Beach.  We continue to set off of Bradford Beach annually, in addition to Doctors Park and Shoop Park.

Wisconsin’s young-of-the-year gill net assessment

Year Number of sets Total effort Number of Yellow Perch caught Catch per 100 feet of effort
2002 18 720 52 7.2
2003 10 400 51 12.75
2004 2 400 19 4.75
2005 2 400 780 195
2006 2 400 243 61
2007 2 400 45 11
2008 4 880 23 2.6
2009 4 1000 13 1.3
2010 6 1200 158 13
2011 5 1000 2 0.2
2012 4 800 1 0.13
2013 3 1800 2 0.11
2014 3 1800 4 0.22
2015 4 800 6 0.75
2016 4 1200 456 38
2017 8 1600 17 0.94
2018 6 1600 0 0.0

Winter Graded-mesh Assessment

The major objectives of the winter graded-mesh assessments are to assess the year-class strength, sex ratio, age, growth and mortality of the yellow perch population in Lake Michigan.  We conduct 5 graded-mesh gill net sets offshore in Milwaukee County and use these data to estimate the year-class strength of the yellow perch population in Wisconsin waters of Lake Michigan.

From 1990-2006 our graded mesh gill net consisted of meshes ranging in size from 1 to 3 inches in 0.25 inch increments.  Beginning with the 2007 assessment we added 3.25 inch mesh onto the net in an effort to capture larger perch from the 1998 year class.  Each box of graded mesh net is 800 feet long, and during the winter survey we set a total of 20 boxes.

Recruitment of younger yellow perch has been very poor since 1990. This is reflected in the graded mesh assessment by poor representation of smaller (younger) yellow perch in the smaller mesh panels of the net.

The sex ratio of yellow perch caught in 2000-2002 was over 60% female, which was much different than the 1990s when the exploitation rate from commercial and sport anglers was much higher.  In the mid-2000s the sex ratio was closer to 50:50, but in recent years the catch has been heavily dominated by females.

Numbers of yellow perch caught during the winter graded mesh gill net assessment have declined to record lows in recent years.  The low abundance of adult yellow perch off Milwaukee is corroborated by low numbers of perch captured during our spawning assessment, in addition to low sport fishing harvest.

Catch Per Effort and the Percent of Each Sex of Yellow Perch Caught in Graded Mesh Gill Nets

Age 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000
1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
2 724 159 49 60 0 0 0 0 0 42 323
3 1037 865 276 98 25 0 0 4 2 57 65
4 938 323 715 402 58 28 0 14 6 215 9
5 394 327 281 757 218 65 0 11 29 93 27
6 381 83 181 165 141 120 19 18 35 57 2
7 90 82 126 49 48 76 51 77 20 45 0
8 0 32 73 16 11 65 71 251 43 63 8
9 0 0 14 0 0 24 31 109 110 44 9
10 0 0 0 0 0 2 12 15 60 33 11
11 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 15 9 1
12 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 7 0
% Males 61 72 82 86 89 90 95 89 80 58 36
% Females 39 28 18 14 11 10 5 11 20 42 64
Age 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
2 1 0 2 3 0 3 40 3 2 6 0
3 243 4 0 1 61 29 24 159 50 43 0
4 20 118 0 0 12 249 60 7 282 56 15
5 2 4 33 1 0 37 204 46 6 287 13
6 2 3 0 27 11 0 31 120 59 33 56
7 1 1 0 1 226 23 4 16 139 52 3
8 2 0 0 0 6 417 20 7 18 94 18
9 1 0 0 0 0 7 113 7 12 8 14
10 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 69 5 26 3
11 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 78 0 4
12 0 1 1 1 2 0 0 0 2 63 0
13 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5
% Males 36 38 52 60 64 53 48 51 40 29 24
% Females 64 62 48 40 36 47 52 49 60 71 76
Age 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
2 4 4 1 1 0 6 0 1
3 1 3 0 4 0 0 0 1
4 7 1 0 3 2 0 0 0
5 11 0 0 3 0 1 0 0
6 13 3 0 0 1 0 0 0
7 66 3 0 1 0 0 0 0
8 5 11 1 1 1 1 0 0
9 14 1 4 1 1 1 0 1
10 11 3 0 9 0 0 0 0
11 3 3 0 0 8 1 0 0
12 1 1 0 1 0 4 0 0
13 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 0
% Males 23 25 20 5 17 11 n/a n/a
% Females 77 75 80 95 83 89 n/a n/a

Alewife Stomach Content Sampling

Alewife predation on yellow perch larvae has been demonstrated in studies on other Great Lakes. No attempt to quantify the influence of alewife predation in Lake Michigan had been undertaken since the 1970s. We sampled adult alewife in an attempt to quantify the proportion of yellow perch larvae lost due to predation by alewife.

Adult alewife were sampled using a graded mesh gill net (1 to 2 1/2 inch stretch mesh). Nets were fished at sunset for 30 minutes. Alewife were measured and their stomachs removed and immediately preserved in 95% ethanol. In addition, a plankton net collected available food sources for the alewives. In 1997, a total of 340 alewife stomach samples were obtained from adult alewife in Lake Michigan during 6 nights of sampling. No larval fish were found in any of the alewife stomachs. Copepoda dominated the diet of alewives, comprising by number 95% of the diet. A plankton net collected available food items, and again, copepoda were the dominant prey available. In 1998, one night of fishing was conducted. Due to the low to zero numbers of larval yellow perch in the plankton nets, this was our only set in 1998.

Lakewide Mark and Recapture Project

Data from surveys conducted lakewide by agencies in each state have indicated that production of young-of-the-year (YOY) yellow perch in Lake Michigan has been minimal since 1989. This recruitment failure has resulted in a 90% to 95% reduction in assessment catches in Wisconsin and Indiana waters, and an 86% decline in Illinois. In addition, the average age of yellow perch captured in assessment catches has steadily increased. Without vital information about lakewide movement, spawning site fidelity and the abundance of the spawning population, management strategies implemented to protect existing yellow perch stocks and enhance population recovery may be ineffective or could adversely affect the restoration and sustainability of the yellow perch fishery.

To effectively manage any sport or commercial fishery, estimates of population size and mortality rates are needed. Although a number of yellow perch tagging projects have been conducted in Lake Michigan and its embayments in the past, these efforts were conducted independently of one another, and only one was known to have included an objective to estimate perch abundance. By conducting a collaborative lakewide tagging study which incorporates standardized mark and recapture methods along with enhanced recovery efforts, we will be able to generate estimates of local perch population abundance that will be comparable among jurisdictions.

10 inch Yellow Perch

Results from this study can be read from:

David C. Glover, John M. Dettmers, and David F. Clapp. 2008. Lake-wide mark and recapture investigation of Lake Michigan yellow perch: evaluation of interstate movements, spawning site fidelity, spawning population abundance, and sources of mortality. Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci. 65:1919-1930.

Reproductive Status and Health of Ovaries and Testes of Adult Yellow Perch from Lakes Michigan and Mendota

After spawning, the sex organs of mature female fish recover and fish begin to invest energy into developing oocytes (eggs) and milt (sperm) for the next spawning season. Ovaries and testes develop over the summer and winter until these sex organs are again ready for spawning. The sex organs of a fish can be examined to indicate how ready the fish is to spawning, also referred to as their reproductive status. The health of the ovaries and testes are important to the success of spawning and survival of hatchlings and young-of-year (YOY) fish. Other parameters, such as hormone and protein levels in blood, can also provide information on the reproductive status and health of the fish.

Yellow Perch Necrospy

The objective of this study was to examine the reproductive health of yellow perch from Lake Michigan and the exposure of these fish to pollutants. Yellow perch from Lake Michigan and a reference site, Lake Mendota Wisconsin, were collected in winter 1996, at spawning in 1997 and in fall 1997. Endpoints included stage and histopathology of ovaries and testes, plasma hormones and vitellogenin, liver mixed function oxygenase activity (EROD), indicators of pollutant exposure, and other parameters. Analysis of variance was conducted to test for the significance of site, sex, year class (age), and gross gonad stage.

Yellow perch from Lake Michigan had higher concentrations of PCBs in all seasons, higher concentrations of p,p’-DDE in the winter (depending on age) and in the fall. In winter, Lake Michigan fish had lower mercury burdens while spring results showed interactions (site*sex and age*stage) to be significant. Lake Michigan fish exhibited higher EROD activities compared to Lake Mendota fish in the spring.

Reproductive parameters differed between sites in some seasons but other main effects and interactions were also significant. In general, Lake Michigan females had vitellogenin levels comparable to males. A greater percentage of Lake Michigan fish were at earlier stages of gametogenesis at each season. Also, a higher percentage of males from Lake Michigan exhibited testicular neoplasms.