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The food of Pseudorasbora parva juveniles from the Kis-Balaton Reservoir in Hungary was analyzed. Nine food components, among which filtrating Cladocera dominated, were confirmed in the diet of this fish. The highest values of the relative importance index were observed for Bosmina sp. at 53.7% (September 1991) and Daphnia sp. at 47.6 and 55.5% in July and September 1992, respectively. Due to the presence of this new ichthyofauna representative in Polish waters, it is possible that the pool of fish species which pressure filtrating Cladocera will increase. Additionally, this species may become a food competitor for native fish both in open waters and cultivation reservoirs.
Stone moroco [Pseudorasbora parva (SCHLEGEL, 1842)] represents a newly introduced fish species in the waters of the western Serbian districts. Some ecological features (age, growth rate, nutrition) were anałyzed on the sample comprising 96 individuals caught at the reservoir profiles.
Background. The topmouth gudgeon, Pseudorasbora parva (Temminck et Schlegel, 1846) (known also as stone moroko), is an alien species of the fish fauna of many European freshwater ecosystems. In large quantities, its may affect negatively the fish fauna and the functioning of ecosystems. It competes for food with native fish species and they occupy their habitat. The knowledge about the invasion dynamics may help to find suitable control measures. The aim of this study was to find and observe the population of P. parva in a small river. Materials and methods. Inventory fishing on three sampling sites at the Ciemięga River was carried out from 2003 to 2007. The abundance and density of P. parva in the river were calculated. The size distribution of P. parva and its length–weight relation were determined. Abundance, density, length, and mass of the fish from all study sites were analyzed statistically. Results. P. parva was first recorded in the Ciemięga River in the autumn of 2005. The abundance of P. parva in relation to the structure of the local ichthyofauna was the smallest in the spring and the highest in autumn. The total length of P. parva ranged from 15 to 104 mm, and the mass from 0.2 to 10.4 g. Taking into account the number of the specimens, P. parva constituted between 0.9% and 57.2% of the local ichthyofauna, while its mass ranged from 0.0% to 35.1% depending on the study site and the season. The density of P. parva ranged from 72.9 to 6.5 CPUEn, while the mean value for the river was 30.6 CPUEn. Conclusion. In Polish waters P. parva is an alien species and there is still little information about its occurrence in the flowing waters. Since 2005, this species was present almost in all inventory catches in the Ciemięga River. Its presence was dependent on the kind of the habitat and the presence of predatory fish species (eg brown trout). P. parva occurring numerous may be a lot of competition for native fish species, and therefore an important problem is to understand his habitat preferences and interactions with native fish species.
A morphological analysis of 11 meristic and 25 plastic characters, based on 72 specimens of Pseudorasbora parva from carp ponds in the region of Ruda Sułowska (Barycz R. system, SW Poland). The populations occurring in European waters display a wide morphological variability, significantly differing from one another. Sexual dimorphism is manifested in larger body size of males as well as in four plastic characters. The main length increase concerns the fish medial section (positive allometry), whereas the distal parts of the body, eye diameter and the postorbital part of head grow slower (negative allometry).
The topmouth gudgeon, Pseudorasbora parva, originating from eastern Asia, was accidentally introduced in European waters (1961) with stocking material of imported herbivorous fishes. In Poland it was first recorded in 1990 in the Barycz R. system – Fish Farm Stawno (SW, Poland); it probably came from Hungary with imported fry of Aristichthys nobilis. It was presumably from that region of Poland that it spread to other fish farms and then rapidly penetrated into rivers and other water bodies. At present 51 localities are known, mainly in the lowlands of Poland. The species still shows an expansion tendency which is favoured by stocking open waters with material containing an admixture of the topmouth gudgeon, using it as a bait-fish and by some aspects of its biology and ecology.
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