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Macquarie perch

The Macquarie perch (Macquaria australasica) is an Australian native freshwater fish of the Murray-Darling river system. It is a member of the family Percichthyidae and is closely related to the golden perch (Macquaria ambigua).

Macquarie perch
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Perciformes
Family: Percichthyidae
Genus: Macquaria
Species:
M. australasica
Binomial name
Macquaria australasica
G. Cuvier, 1830
Synonyms[2]
  • Dules viverrinus Krefft, 1868
  • Murrayia guntheri Castelnau, 1872
  • Riverina fluviatilis Castelnau, 1872
  • Murrayia cyprinoides Castelnau, 1872
  • Murrayia bramoides Castelnau, 1872
  • Dules christyi Castelnau, 1872
  • Murrayia riverina W. J. Macleay, 1881
  • Murrayia jenkinsi W. J. Macleay, 1885

The Macquarie perch derives its scientific name from the Macquarie River where the first scientifically described specimen was collected (Macquaria) and a derivation of the Latin word for "southern" (australasica).

Description and diet edit

 
Closeup of Macquarie perch head

Macquarie perch are a medium-sized fish, commonly 30–40 cm and 1.0–1.5 kg. Maximum size is about 2.5 kg and 50 cm. Their body is elongated, deep, and laterally compressed. The caudal fin, anal fin and soft dorsal fin are rounded. Spiny dorsal fin medium height and strong. Mouth and eyes are relatively small. Colouration can vary from tan to (more commonly) dark purplish-grey to black. The irises of the eyes are distinctly silver.

Macquarie perch are a relatively placid native fish species with the bulk of their diet consisting of aquatic invertebrates such as caddisfly, stonefly and mayfly species, with a small quantity of terrestrial insects taken as well.

Breeding and biology edit

The Macquarie perch is primarily an upland native fish and has a breeding biology clearly adapted to flowing upland rivers and streams. (For this reason, the species has proven difficult to breed artificially, as captive females do not produce ripe eggs when kept in still broodponds or tanks). Macquarie perch breed in late spring at temperatures of 15 to 16 °C, in flowing water over unsilted cobble and gravel substrate. The demersal (sinking) eggs fall into the interstices (spaces) between the gravel and cobble, where they lodge and are then protected and incubated until hatching. This is a breeding strategy similar to that used by introduced species of trout.

Macquarie perch appear to have inherited the sexual dimorphism of other Macquaria species where females reach a larger maximum size than males. Females also reach sexual maturity at older, larger sizes than males.

Limited ageing work on Macquarie perch has recorded fish to 20 years of age. Maximum age for Macquarie perch is probably similar to the maximum age recorded for the closely related golden perch (26 years).

Range edit

Macquarie perch were originally found in the larger upland rivers and streams in the south-eastern corner of the Murray-Darling system, which they usually co-inhabited with trout cod and one or both of the blackfish species.

Macquarie perch continue a pattern found in native freshwater fish of the Murray-Darling system of specialisation into lowland and upland stream inhabitants. Macquarie perch are a speciated, more specialised upland version of the golden perch, which is primarily a lowland fish. (Having said this, the primarily lowland golden perch, being highly adaptable species, did extend into upland habitats) in some situations.

Macquarie perch are found in the eastern coastal Shoalhaven and Hawkesbury-Nepean river systems as well as the Murray-Darling Basin, indicating that, as with some other native fish genera in south-eastern Australia, Macquarie perch have managed to cross the Great Dividing Range through natural river capture/connection events. Genetic research now indicates the Shoalhaven River population was the ancestral Macquarie perch population and colonised the Hawkesbury-Nepean system ~2 million years ago, and the Hawkesbury-Nepean population then colonised the Murray-Darling Basin – possibly through a "wet divide" in the Breadalbane Plains region, ~657,000 years ago (Faulks et al., 2008).

Major differences between the eastern coastal populations and the Murray-Darling population are that the eastern coastal populations display a far smaller average and maximum size (15 and 20 cm respectively) and are reported to have one less vertebra than the Murray-Darling species. Recent evidence suggest the Shoalhaven population is now extinct after a rapid decline due to damming of their habitat and subsequent encroachment of legally and illegally stocked fish species. The Hawkesbury-Nepean population appears to be threatened by introduced trout and other exotic fish, river damming and regulation, siltation, and urban encroachment, but does not appear to be as threatened as the Murray-Darling species. Information on this page relates primarily to the Murray-Darling population.

There is a translocated population in the Mongarlowe River, a tributary of the Shoalhaven.[3][4][5] It is thought that this population descends from fish from the Murray-Darling Basin and not the eastern sub-species native to other parts of the Shoalhaven catchment. In recent years, this population seems to be in decline and may be doomed to local extinction.[5]

There is also a translocated self-sustaining breeding population of Macquarie Perch located in the middle and upper reaches of the Yarra River on the outskirts of Melbourne. They highest numbers are found lowest reaches, which also support a mix of translocated native and introduced fish including trout. In this stretch however no fish species is particularly dominant, and introduced trout are not numerous.

Conservation edit

Murray-Darling Macquarie perch are now listed as endangered on state and Commonwealth listings. Gross overfishing by anglers, habitat degradation through siltation, and regulation of flow and "thermal pollution" by dams have all been major causes of decline. A mysterious but endemic disease called Epizootic Haemotopoeitic Necrosis virus (EHN virus), now vectored by introduced redfin perch, has been proven to be fatal to Macquarie perch, and may have contributed to the decline of some populations of Macquarie perch in upland impoundments. What has become clear however is that total domination of the Macquarie perch's upland habitats by introduced brown trout (Salmo trutta) and rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) have also been a major cause of decline. Indeed, Macquarie perch populations have failed in significant stretches of relatively pristine upland river that offer excellent habitat, are not silted, dammed or overfished, and where there are no possible explanations for their demise except introduced trout species. Dietary studies have documented significant overlap between the diet of Macquarie perch and introduced trout species, and anglers have observed predation of Macquarie perch juveniles by introduced trout species. Several publications in the 1940s through to the 1960s by the director of the Victorian Fisheries and Game Department (A.D.Butcher) documents predation on juvenile trout cod, Macquarie perch and other upland native fish species by introduced trout species, and major dietary overlaps. Recent research (Lintermans, 2006) records dietary overlaps that are significant by scientific criteria between Macquarie perch and introduced trout species.

Over the last 20 or 30 years, the last few remaining Macquarie perch populations in upland habitats have faltered. All of these populations appear to be in extinction vortices and may disappear completely over the next several decades.

Macquarie perch have proved difficult but not impossible to breed. However, no Australian government agency is breeding Macquarie perch in significant numbers, and some government agencies are stocking upland habitats containing remnant Macquarie perch populations with introduced trout species. Not only do these stockings threaten Macquarie perch by competition and predation, but rainbow trout fingerlings have been shown to carry significant levels of EHN virus.

References edit

  1. ^ Lintermans, M.; Pearce, L.; Tonkin, Z.; Bruce, A. & Gilligan, D. (2020) [errata version of 2019 assessment]. "Macquaria australasica". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2019: e.T12581A167651778. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2019-3.RLTS.T12581A167651778.en.
  2. ^ Froese, Rainer; Pauly, Daniel (eds.) (2019). "Macquaria australasica" in FishBase. December 2019 version.
  3. ^ Informative sign alongside Mongarlow River at Mongarlowe, N.S.W.
  4. ^ Tennant-wood, Robin (24 January 2019). "Downstream assessment for 'Maccas'". Braidwood Times. Retrieved 29 January 2021.
  5. ^ a b Lintermans, Mark (August 2008). "The Status of Macquarie Perch Macquaria australasica in the Mongarlowe River in 2007 and 2008" (PDF).
  • Lintermans, M.; Pearce, L.; Tonkin, Z.; Bruce, A.; Gilligan, D. (2019). "Macquaria australasica". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2019: e.T12581A167651778. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2019-3.RLTS.T12581A167651778.en.
  • "Macquaria australasica". Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved 11 March 2006.
  • Froese, Rainer; Pauly, Daniel (eds.) (2005). "Macquaria australasica" in FishBase. 10 2005 version.
  • Butcher, A.D. 1945. The food of indigenous and non-indigenous freshwater fish in Victoria, with special reference to [introduced] trout. Fisheries Pamphlet 2. Fisheries and Wildlife Department, Victoria.
  • Butcher, A.D. 1967. A changing aquatic fauna in a changing environment. IUCN Publications, New Series 9: 197–218.
  • Cadwallader, P.L. (ed.) 1977. J.O. Langtry's 1949–50 Murray River Investigations. Fisheries and Wildlife Paper. Ministry for Conservation, Victoria.
  • Cadwallader, P.L. 1981. Past and present distributions and translocations of the Macquarie perch Macquaria australasica (Pisces: Percichthyidae), with particular reference to Victoria. Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria 93: 23–30.
  • Cadwallader, P.L. & Eden, A.K. 1979. Observations on the food of Macquarie Perch, Macquaria australasica (Pisces: Percicthyidae) in Victoria, Australian Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research 30: 401–409.
  • Cadwallader, P.L. & Rogan, P.L. 1977. The Macquarie Perch, Macquaria australasica (Pisces: Percicthyidae), of Lake Eildon, Australian Journal of Ecology 2: 409–418
  • McDowall, R.M. (ed.) 1996. Freshwater Fishes of south-eastern Australia. Reed Books, Sydney, Australia.
  • Faulks L.K., Gilligan D.M. & Beheregaray L.B. (2008). Evolution and maintenance of divergent lineages in an endangered freshwater fish, Macquaria australasica. Conservation Genetics. DOI 10.1007/s10592-009-9936-7.
  • Lintermans, M. (2006) The re-establishment of endangered Macquarie Perch Macquaria australasica in the Queanbeyan River, New South Wales, with an examination of dietary overlap with alien trout. Technical report, CRCFE, Canberra.
  • McKeown, K.C. 1934. Notes on the food of trout and Macquarie Perch in Australia, Records of the Australian Museum 19: 141–152.
  • Merrick, J.R. & Schmida, G.E. 1984. Australian freshwater fishes: biology and management. Griffin Press, Sydney, Australia.
  • Rhodes, J.O. 1999. Heads and Tales: Recollections of a Fisheries and Wildlife Officer. The Australian Deer Research Foundation Ltd., Melbourne.
  • Trueman WT (2007). Some recollections of native fish in the Murray-Darling system with special reference to the trout cod (Maccullochella macquariensis). Summary and source material for the draft publication 'True Tales of the Trout Cod'. Native Fish Australia (Victoria) Incorporated, Doncaster, Victoria. Available online at:
  • Trueman WT (2011). True Tales of the Trout Cod: River Histories of the Murray-Darling Basin. Publication No. 215/11. Murray-Darling Basin Authority, Canberra. Also available online at:
  • Trueman, W. and Luker, C. 1992. Fishing Yesteryear. Freshwater Fishing Australia Magazine 17: 34–38.

External links edit

  • Sweetwater Fishing Australia – Macquarie Perch
  • Native Fish Australia – Macquarie perch page

macquarie, perch, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, 2020, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, macquari. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations May 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Macquarie perch Macquaria australasica is an Australian native freshwater fish of the Murray Darling river system It is a member of the family Percichthyidae and is closely related to the golden perch Macquaria ambigua Macquarie perch Conservation status Endangered IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Class Actinopterygii Order Perciformes Family Percichthyidae Genus Macquaria Species M australasica Binomial name Macquaria australasicaG Cuvier 1830 Synonyms 2 Dules viverrinus Krefft 1868 Murrayia guntheri Castelnau 1872 Riverina fluviatilis Castelnau 1872 Murrayia cyprinoides Castelnau 1872 Murrayia bramoides Castelnau 1872 Dules christyi Castelnau 1872 Murrayia riverina W J Macleay 1881 Murrayia jenkinsi W J Macleay 1885 The Macquarie perch derives its scientific name from the Macquarie River where the first scientifically described specimen was collected Macquaria and a derivation of the Latin word for southern australasica Contents 1 Description and diet 2 Breeding and biology 3 Range 4 Conservation 5 References 6 External linksDescription and diet edit nbsp Closeup of Macquarie perch head Macquarie perch are a medium sized fish commonly 30 40 cm and 1 0 1 5 kg Maximum size is about 2 5 kg and 50 cm Their body is elongated deep and laterally compressed The caudal fin anal fin and soft dorsal fin are rounded Spiny dorsal fin medium height and strong Mouth and eyes are relatively small Colouration can vary from tan to more commonly dark purplish grey to black The irises of the eyes are distinctly silver Macquarie perch are a relatively placid native fish species with the bulk of their diet consisting of aquatic invertebrates such as caddisfly stonefly and mayfly species with a small quantity of terrestrial insects taken as well Breeding and biology editThe Macquarie perch is primarily an upland native fish and has a breeding biology clearly adapted to flowing upland rivers and streams For this reason the species has proven difficult to breed artificially as captive females do not produce ripe eggs when kept in still broodponds or tanks Macquarie perch breed in late spring at temperatures of 15 to 16 C in flowing water over unsilted cobble and gravel substrate The demersal sinking eggs fall into the interstices spaces between the gravel and cobble where they lodge and are then protected and incubated until hatching This is a breeding strategy similar to that used by introduced species of trout Macquarie perch appear to have inherited the sexual dimorphism of other Macquaria species where females reach a larger maximum size than males Females also reach sexual maturity at older larger sizes than males Limited ageing work on Macquarie perch has recorded fish to 20 years of age Maximum age for Macquarie perch is probably similar to the maximum age recorded for the closely related golden perch 26 years Range editMacquarie perch were originally found in the larger upland rivers and streams in the south eastern corner of the Murray Darling system which they usually co inhabited with trout cod and one or both of the blackfish species Macquarie perch continue a pattern found in native freshwater fish of the Murray Darling system of specialisation into lowland and upland stream inhabitants Macquarie perch are a speciated more specialised upland version of the golden perch which is primarily a lowland fish Having said this the primarily lowland golden perch being highly adaptable species did extend into upland habitats in some situations Macquarie perch are found in the eastern coastal Shoalhaven and Hawkesbury Nepean river systems as well as the Murray Darling Basin indicating that as with some other native fish genera in south eastern Australia Macquarie perch have managed to cross the Great Dividing Range through natural river capture connection events Genetic research now indicates the Shoalhaven River population was the ancestral Macquarie perch population and colonised the Hawkesbury Nepean system 2 million years ago and the Hawkesbury Nepean population then colonised the Murray Darling Basin possibly through a wet divide in the Breadalbane Plains region 657 000 years ago Faulks et al 2008 Major differences between the eastern coastal populations and the Murray Darling population are that the eastern coastal populations display a far smaller average and maximum size 15 and 20 cm respectively and are reported to have one less vertebra than the Murray Darling species Recent evidence suggest the Shoalhaven population is now extinct after a rapid decline due to damming of their habitat and subsequent encroachment of legally and illegally stocked fish species The Hawkesbury Nepean population appears to be threatened by introduced trout and other exotic fish river damming and regulation siltation and urban encroachment but does not appear to be as threatened as the Murray Darling species Information on this page relates primarily to the Murray Darling population There is a translocated population in the Mongarlowe River a tributary of the Shoalhaven 3 4 5 It is thought that this population descends from fish from the Murray Darling Basin and not the eastern sub species native to other parts of the Shoalhaven catchment In recent years this population seems to be in decline and may be doomed to local extinction 5 There is also a translocated self sustaining breeding population of Macquarie Perch located in the middle and upper reaches of the Yarra River on the outskirts of Melbourne They highest numbers are found lowest reaches which also support a mix of translocated native and introduced fish including trout In this stretch however no fish species is particularly dominant and introduced trout are not numerous Conservation editMurray Darling Macquarie perch are now listed as endangered on state and Commonwealth listings Gross overfishing by anglers habitat degradation through siltation and regulation of flow and thermal pollution by dams have all been major causes of decline A mysterious but endemic disease called Epizootic Haemotopoeitic Necrosis virus EHN virus now vectored by introduced redfin perch has been proven to be fatal to Macquarie perch and may have contributed to the decline of some populations of Macquarie perch in upland impoundments What has become clear however is that total domination of the Macquarie perch s upland habitats by introduced brown trout Salmo trutta and rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss have also been a major cause of decline Indeed Macquarie perch populations have failed in significant stretches of relatively pristine upland river that offer excellent habitat are not silted dammed or overfished and where there are no possible explanations for their demise except introduced trout species Dietary studies have documented significant overlap between the diet of Macquarie perch and introduced trout species and anglers have observed predation of Macquarie perch juveniles by introduced trout species Several publications in the 1940s through to the 1960s by the director of the Victorian Fisheries and Game Department A D Butcher documents predation on juvenile trout cod Macquarie perch and other upland native fish species by introduced trout species and major dietary overlaps Recent research Lintermans 2006 records dietary overlaps that are significant by scientific criteria between Macquarie perch and introduced trout species Over the last 20 or 30 years the last few remaining Macquarie perch populations in upland habitats have faltered All of these populations appear to be in extinction vortices and may disappear completely over the next several decades Macquarie perch have proved difficult but not impossible to breed However no Australian government agency is breeding Macquarie perch in significant numbers and some government agencies are stocking upland habitats containing remnant Macquarie perch populations with introduced trout species Not only do these stockings threaten Macquarie perch by competition and predation but rainbow trout fingerlings have been shown to carry significant levels of EHN virus References edit Lintermans M Pearce L Tonkin Z Bruce A amp Gilligan D 2020 errata version of 2019 assessment Macquaria australasica IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2019 e T12581A167651778 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2019 3 RLTS T12581A167651778 en Froese Rainer Pauly Daniel eds 2019 Macquaria australasica in FishBase December 2019 version Informative sign alongside Mongarlow River at Mongarlowe N S W Tennant wood Robin 24 January 2019 Downstream assessment for Maccas Braidwood Times Retrieved 29 January 2021 a b Lintermans Mark August 2008 The Status of Macquarie Perch Macquaria australasica in the Mongarlowe River in 2007 and 2008 PDF Lintermans M Pearce L Tonkin Z Bruce A Gilligan D 2019 Macquaria australasica IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2019 e T12581A167651778 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2019 3 RLTS T12581A167651778 en Macquaria australasica Integrated Taxonomic Information System Retrieved 11 March 2006 Froese Rainer Pauly Daniel eds 2005 Macquaria australasica in FishBase 10 2005 version Butcher A D 1945 The food of indigenous and non indigenous freshwater fish in Victoria with special reference to introduced trout Fisheries Pamphlet 2 Fisheries and Wildlife Department Victoria Butcher A D 1967 A changing aquatic fauna in a changing environment IUCN Publications New Series 9 197 218 Cadwallader P L ed 1977 J O Langtry s 1949 50 Murray River Investigations Fisheries and Wildlife Paper Ministry for Conservation Victoria Cadwallader P L 1981 Past and present distributions and translocations of the Macquarie perch Macquaria australasica Pisces Percichthyidae with particular reference to Victoria Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria 93 23 30 Cadwallader P L amp Eden A K 1979 Observations on the food of Macquarie Perch Macquaria australasica Pisces Percicthyidae in Victoria Australian Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research 30 401 409 Cadwallader P L amp Rogan P L 1977 The Macquarie Perch Macquaria australasica Pisces Percicthyidae of Lake Eildon Australian Journal of Ecology 2 409 418 McDowall R M ed 1996 Freshwater Fishes of south eastern Australia Reed Books Sydney Australia Faulks L K Gilligan D M amp Beheregaray L B 2008 Evolution and maintenance of divergent lineages in an endangered freshwater fish Macquaria australasica Conservation Genetics DOI 10 1007 s10592 009 9936 7 Lintermans M 2006 The re establishment of endangered Macquarie Perch Macquaria australasica in the Queanbeyan River New South Wales with an examination of dietary overlap with alien trout Technical report CRCFE Canberra McKeown K C 1934 Notes on the food of trout and Macquarie Perch in Australia Records of the Australian Museum 19 141 152 Merrick J R amp Schmida G E 1984 Australian freshwater fishes biology and management Griffin Press Sydney Australia Rhodes J O 1999 Heads and Tales Recollections of a Fisheries and Wildlife Officer The Australian Deer Research Foundation Ltd Melbourne Trueman WT 2007 Some recollections of native fish in the Murray Darling system with special reference to the trout cod Maccullochella macquariensis Summary and source material for the draft publication True Tales of the Trout Cod Native Fish Australia Victoria Incorporated Doncaster Victoria Available online at https web archive org web 20080721002731 http www nativefish asn au files Recollections compressed pdf Trueman WT 2011 True Tales of the Trout Cod River Histories of the Murray Darling Basin Publication No 215 11 Murray Darling Basin Authority Canberra Also available online at https web archive org web 20130807212235 http australianriverrestorationcentre com au mdb troutcod Trueman W and Luker C 1992 Fishing Yesteryear Freshwater Fishing Australia Magazine 17 34 38 External links editSweetwater Fishing Australia Macquarie Perch Native Fish Australia Macquarie perch page Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Macquarie perch amp oldid 1180465850, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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