GENETIC AND POPULATION CHARACTERISTICS OF WALLEYES IN THE MOBILE DRAINAGE OF ALABAMA

Citation
N. Billington et Mj. Maceina, GENETIC AND POPULATION CHARACTERISTICS OF WALLEYES IN THE MOBILE DRAINAGE OF ALABAMA, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society, 126(5), 1997, pp. 804-814
Citations number
44
ISSN journal
00028487
Volume
126
Issue
5
Year of publication
1997
Pages
804 - 814
Database
ISI
SICI code
0002-8487(1997)126:5<804:GAPCOW>2.0.ZU;2-9
Abstract
Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) analysis conducted on walleyes Stizostedion vitreum collected in Alabama indicated that 44 fish from the Mobile dr ainage were of the recently described southern haplotype, whereas all 5 fish from the Tennessee River had a northern haplotype. No successfu l establishment of female walleyes from Ohio stocked in the Mobile dra inage between 1973 and 1985 was indicated by the mtDNA data. However, 3 of 22 loci screened by protein electrophoresis were polymorphic in A labama walleyes, and three fish in the western portion of the Mobile d rainage possessed alleles more typically seen in northern walleyes. Th ese three fish could be descendants of stocked northern male walleyes or individuals with northern alleles that resulted from hybridizations with northern walleyes that had entered the western Mobile drainage v ia the Tennessee-Tombigbee Waterway. Southern walleyes in Alabama grow rapidly and reach harvestable size (356 mm) by age-2. The largest wal leye collected for this study was 601 mm in total length and weighed 2 .73 kg; the oldest fish was 9 years old. Females grew faster than male s. At Hatchet Creek, spawning success appeared to be greater during sp rings with cooler weather. Walleyes from Hatchet Creek on the Coosa Ri ver appear to be ''pure'' southern walleyes and are recommended as a s ource of broodfish for captive breeding programs designed to conserve the southern strain.