Abstract

Abstract More than 100 million fry of walleye Stizostedion vitreum are stocked annually into lakes of the prairie provinces of Canada to enhance sport and commercial fisheries. However, the success of this practice has not been evaluated. We introduced 7.1 million genetically marked walleye fry into Dauphin Lake, a 50,000-hectare lake in Manitoba, in 1985 to evaluate fry stocking as a tool for fishery enhancement. The 1985 walleye cohort was fully recruited into the commercial fishery at age 3 (in 1988). We sampled commercial catches in the winters of 1988 and 1989 to determine the phenotypes for supernatant malate dehydrogenase in 727 3-year-old walleyes and 657 4-year-old walleyes of the 1985 (enhanced) year-class. The introduced fish contributed about 2.9% to the 1985 year-class of walleyes. The survival of walleye fry from the time of stocking to age 3 (in the fall) was estimated at 0.04%. At current walleye harvest rates in Dauphin Lake (about 13,000 kg/year), the stocked fish were expected to contri...

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