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Carp and bass

Anyone know the affect carp have on bass? What about a whole lot of carp in a lake or pond?
SHREDİ
Jun 10
2004
Carp can and do wipe out a small pond or lake of everything,, I understand they go around sucking up everything from the bottom, when coming across a fish bed,, they get all the eggs, they get the eggs of everything, including the bass's food fish,, like blue gill and shad Rodney
Jun 10
Some of the effects that carp can have on a lake or pond.

They can decimate the weedbeds in a lake, causing loss of habitat for forage fish, fry and fingerlings.

They can cause excessive silt dispersion in the water from their rooting in the bottom. This can cause fish to relocate to other areas of the body of water. This increase in silt causes the water to darken, which absorbes more heat from the sunlight, raising the temperature of the water. The siltation of the water also reduces available sunlight for the aquatic vegetation, hindering the process of photosynthesis.

They can eat the eggs of other fish in the lake, reducing natural reproduction.

They compete with other native species, reducing available food.

They are extremely prolific breeders, growing fast under less than ideal conditions. Once beyond a certain size, there is nothing to prey on them.

Other than that, not much ;-p

Steve
Jun 10
There are lots of factors that play into this question. In the worst case, carp stir up so much sediment they turn the water turbid -- which leads to more algae blooms, cuts the amount of light in the water which restricts plant growth and reduces the amouth of little plankton and such.....in a bad case it can virtually kill all other species. However, there are a lot of factors that contribute to turbid water and many attempts to control.

Your local DNR will ahvve some ideas and guidelines of the acceptable biomass of carp per acre.

Here's a link on some carp control studies http://www.hort.agri.umn.edu/h5015/00papers/baldry.htm

QUOTE: Cyprinus carpio (common carp) are regarded as one of the most important freshwater fish in the world, considered prized food in Asia, Europe and the Middle East. When introduced into ponds in Washington D.C. in the 1870?s, they were believed to be so valuable that the ponds had to be guarded (Eddy and Underhill 1974).

zenbasser1
Jun 11
I don't know what the carp actually do to affect bass, but I do know that the presence of carp doesn't necessarily preclude a good bass population, because in many bodies of water both small and large, carp and bass seem to co-exist quite nicely. Marty
Jun 11
Very true Marty, I've even seen bass intermingling with carp on severaloccasions.

Warren

go-bassn
Jun 11
   

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