Wading Bird Predation at Tropical Aquaculture Facilities in Central Florida

In 1995 and 1996, fish loss due to bird predation was documented at 18 ponds at seven aquaculture facilities in central Florida. Losses in ponds from which birds were excluded with netting averaged 11.1%, whereas losses in unnetted ponds averaged 37.6%. Populations of wading birds varied among facil...

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Veröffentlicht in:North American journal of aquaculture 1999-01, Vol.61 (1), p.64-69
Hauptverfasser: Avery, Michael L., Eiselman, David S., Young, Mark K., Humphrey, John S., Decker, David G.
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container_end_page 69
container_issue 1
container_start_page 64
container_title North American journal of aquaculture
container_volume 61
creator Avery, Michael L.
Eiselman, David S.
Young, Mark K.
Humphrey, John S.
Decker, David G.
description In 1995 and 1996, fish loss due to bird predation was documented at 18 ponds at seven aquaculture facilities in central Florida. Losses in ponds from which birds were excluded with netting averaged 11.1%, whereas losses in unnetted ponds averaged 37.6%. Populations of wading birds varied among facilities, but the snowy egret Egretta thula, green‐backed heron Butorides striatus, tricolored heron E. tricolor, and little blue heron E. caerulea were the principal depredating species. Field observations revealed feeding rates by little blue herons as high as 4 fish/min. Estimated monetary losses at unnetted study ponds averaged US$1,360/pond compared with average losses of $589 at netted ponds. Currently, exclusion is the only technique that is consistently reliable, and it appears that netting ponds to control bird depredations is economically feasible, particularly with high‐value fish.
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title Wading Bird Predation at Tropical Aquaculture Facilities in Central Florida
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