Abstract

Abstract Factors related to growth and survival of 10-d cohorts of larval bluegills Lepomis macrochirus were examined in two small impoundments via daily growth increments on otoliths. Successful spawning occurred from April through September, producing peak larval densities greater than 360 fish/m3. Larval bluegill density was negatively correlated with zooplankton density in both ponds, suggesting that larvae reduced zooplankton abundance via predation. Several variables were related to larval growth and mortality. Cohorts whose larval densities were low tended to have faster growth and higher survival than cohorts with high larval densities. The mechanism responsible for this density-dependent relation was not clear in all instances; however, some evidence suggested that control occurred via intraspecific competition for zooplankton. Relative survival of larval bluegills to the juvenile stage was negatively correlated with limnetic larval fish density; however, no relations were detected between larval...

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