Abstract

AbstractWalleyes Sander vitreus are an important cultural and economic resource in northern Wisconsin, both as a recreational fishery and a tribal subsistence fishery. Understanding the recruitment of age‐0 walleyes to the adult population could be of great utility in effectively managing harvest and informing stocking efforts in this mixed‐use fishery. Our objective was to determine the relationship between abundance of age‐0 walleyes in the fall and the subsequent adult year‐class 4 years later and to explain additional residual variation related to environmental variables. Since 1986, fall electrofishing surveys have been conducted to estimate the densities of age‐0 walleyes and spring mark–recapture surveys to estimate spawning adult walleyes. We fit a gamma stock–recruitment curve to a data set of 104 paired surveys (age‐0 survey with adult survey conducted 4 years later) on 58 lakes and attempted to explain residual variation related to additional environmental variables. Our analysis suggests that the maximum number of age‐4 fish (3.36/ha) is not produced by the maximum number of age‐0 fish but by a somewhat intermediate density (243/ha) and that this relationship varies with the complexity of the shoreline. This density‐dependent relationship should help managers refine models forecasting walleye abundance, as well as optimize stocking rates.Received December 28, 2011; accepted April 27, 2012

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