Australian bass
The Australian bass is a small-to-medium-sized species of primarily freshwater ray-finned fish found in coastal rivers and streams along the east coast of Australia. A member of the genus Percalates from the order Centrarchiformes, the Australian bass is an important member of the native fish assemblages found in east coast river systems. It is a native predatory fish and an extremely popular game fish species among anglers. The species was simply called perch in most coastal rivers where it was caught until the 1960s, when the name "Australian bass" started to gain popularity.
Taxonomy
Australian bass are closely related and very similar in appearance to estuary perch. The estuarine perch, however, tends to stay in the estuarine reaches and in the extreme lower freshwater reaches. Although hybridization between the two species is rare overall, it is relatively common in the far southern extremities of the range of the Australian bass.In the 1970s Australian bass and estuary perch were moved into the genus Macquaria – one of a number of Australian genera in the family Percichthyidae – along with two species of native perch from the Murray-Darling Basin, golden perch and Macquarie perch. Prior to that, Australian bass and estuary perch were in a separate genus, Percalates. .
Results from research using genetic MtDNA analysis revealed that Australian bass and estuary perch are not closely related to golden perch and Macquarie perch, which resulted in researchers resurrecting the genus Percalates and referring to Australian bass and estuary perch as Percalates novemaculeatus and Percalates colonorum respectively. Unexpectedly Percalates was found to be genetically closer to the genus Maccullochella than to the remnant genus Macquaria. However, more recent studies have found Percalates to be the earliest-diverging genus within the order Centrarchiformes, being only distantly related to Macquaria and other percichthyids, and have been placed in their own putative family Percalatidae.
Steindachner does not explicitly state the reasons behind the surprisingly ambiguous specific name novemaculeata that he created for Australian bass. There are several possibilities. It may be a Latin rendering of "new" and "spotted" and refer to the distinct black blotches juvenile bass are temporarily marked with when very small. It may be a Latin rendering of "in an unusual manner" and "spotted" and refer to the specimens he examined being "spotted":
The most likely explanation however is a Latin rendering of "nine" and "spines/needles" and refer to the spiny dorsal fin, which is relatively high and sharp and which Steindachner indicates is usually composed of nine dorsal spines:
Image:Australian bass.JPG|thumb|right|An Australian bass before release.
Description and size
Australian bass have a moderately deep, elongated body that is laterally compressed. They have a forked caudal fin and angular anal and soft dorsal fins. Their spiny dorsal fin is relatively high, strong and sharp. They have a medium-sized mouth and relatively large eyes than can appear dark in low light or red in bright light. The opercula or gill covers on Australian bass carry extremely sharp flat spines that can cut fishermens' fingers deeply.Australian bass vary in colour from metallic gold in clear sandy streams to the more usual bronze or bronze-green colouration in streams with darker substrates and/or some tannin staining to the water.
Australian bass are, overall, a smallish-sized species. Wild river fish average around and. A river fish of or larger is a good specimen. Maximum size in rivers appears to be around and in southern waters, and around and in northern waters. Australian bass stocked in man-made impoundments grow to greater average and maximum weights than this.
Range
Australian bass are found in coastal rivers and streams from Wilsons Promontory in Victoria east and north along the eastern seaboard to the rivers and creeks of the Bundaberg region in central Queensland.Australian bass are not found in the Murray-Darling system. Although the system is extensive, it terminates in a sequence of coastal lakes and lagoons and has only one shallow and changeable entrance to the Southern Ocean — features that appear to be incompatible with the estuarine breeding habits of Australian bass and other aspects of their life cycle.
Migratory patterns
Australian bass are primarily a freshwater riverine species, but must breed in estuarine waters. Consequently, Australian bass reside in the freshwater reaches of coastal rivers for the warmer half of the year or slightly more and in the estuarine reaches in winter, and are highly migratory in general.A general description of the typical migratory pattern for adult Australian bass in the central portion of their range would be:
- September: re-enter lower freshwater reaches after spawning
- October–November: movement through middle freshwater reaches
- December–February: maximum penetration into negotiable upper freshwater reaches
- March–April: slow movement back down through freshwater reaches in anticipation of spawning run
- May: strong spawning run to estuarine reaches
- June–July–August: aggregation and spawning in estuarine reaches
Australian bass are found at their highest altitude in the freshwater reaches of rivers during the months of December, January and February. Research indicates there is sexual segregation in this non-spawning season for resource partitioning purposes. Males inhabit the lower freshwater reaches of rivers while females travel far into the middle and even upper freshwater reaches. The distance Australia bass travel upstream appears to be limited only by flows and impassable barriers. Thus, historically, the effective altitudinal limit for Australian bass has been as high as in some river systems. For instance, Australian bass originally migrated up to the Dalgety region in the Snowy River, well above Oallen Crossing on the Shoalhaven River and far up the Warragamba River and Coxs River before these rivers were dammed:
Habitat
In the freshwater reaches of coastal rivers in the warmer months, Australian bass require reasonable quality, unsilted habitats with adequate native riparian vegetation and in-stream cover/habitat. Australian bass generally sit in cover during the day. However, they are fairly flexible about the type of cover used. Sunken timber, undercut banks, boulders, shade under trees and bushes overhanging the water and thick weedbeds are all used as cover. Such cover does not need to be in deep water to be used; Australian bass are happy to use cover in water as shallow as 1 metre in depth.Australian bass are strong swimmers at all sizes and can easily traverse rapids and fast-flowing water. However, they generally avoid sitting directly in currents to conserve energy.
Image:Australian bass habitat — rapids.JPG|thumb|Australian bass easily traverse rapids like these in their coastal river habitats. However, they require floods or freshes to drown out more significant rapids and cascades and make them passable.
At night Australian bass display pelagic behaviour and actively hunt prey in shallow water and at the water's surface.
When aggregated for spawning in the broad reaches of estuaries in winter, Australian bass are less cover oriented, and generally sit in deeper water.
Diet
Common items in the diet of Australian bass are:- terrestrial insects, particularly cicadas
- aquatic macroinvertebrates, particularly Trichoptera larvae
- crustaceans in the forms of freshwater shrimps and estuarine prawns
- small fish, particularly flathead gudgeon, which are common in their freshwater habitats.
Growth and age
For reasons that are not clear, Australian bass are extremely slow growing. Australian bass continue the trend present in the larger native fish species of SE Australia of being very long-lived. Longevity is a survival strategy to ensure that most adults participate in at least one exceptional spawning and recruitment event, which are often linked to unusually wet 'La Niña' years and may only occur every one or two decades. For many years, the maximum age recorded in wild Australian bass was 22 years. However, a wild bass from the Genoa River system has now been aged at 47 years of age. The same study recorded numerous wild bass aged 19 years of age and 29 years of age.Reproduction
The Australian bass is sexually dimorphic. Males tend to have an absolute maximum size of or less, while females regularly exceed and sometimes reach the maximum size of. Males reach sexual maturity at 3+ years of age, females at 5–6 years of age.Australian bass spawn in estuaries in winter, generally in the months of July or August. There is uncertainty about the salinity levels that Australian bass spawn in. Estuaries are dynamic habitats with daily fluxes in salinity due to tides, and are also affected by droughts, floods and freshes, making measurements of preferred spawning salinities for wild Australian bass difficult. However, based on capture of recently spawned larval and juvenile Australian bass in estuaries, the species appears to spawn in a salinity range of 8–12 parts per thousand. Australian bass sperm have no viability at or below 6 ppt, but are most viable at 12 ppt, the latter probably being the most relevant fact. However, it has been reported that Australian bass spawned in salinities of 12–18 ppt, with this statement based on fishermens' reports of observing wild Australian bass spawnings and some unpublished data gathered by the NSW Fisheries Department.
Artificial breeding of Australian bass is carried out at much higher salinities than natural.
Australian bass are highly fecund, with a reported mean fecundity of 440,000 eggs from the mature wild female specimens examined, and one very large specimen yielding 1,400,000 eggs. The eggs are reported as being demersal in natural spawning salinities, in which case estuarine vegetation such as sea grass almost certainly play an important role in "trapping" and protecting eggs. Larvae hatch in 2–3 days. Juvenile Australian bass migrate into the freshwater reaches after spending several months in estuarine waters.
Despite spawning in estuaries, Australian bass rely on floods coming down river systems into the estuaries throughout the winter period, both to stimulate migration and spawning in adult Australian bass and to create productivity increases that lead to strong survival and recruitment of Australian bass larvae.
Australian bass adults and larvae may also enter the sea during winter spawning in times of flood. It has been reported:
The presence of field-caught larvae of both species on incoming tides in Swansea Channel indicates that the larvae have spent some time in the ocean... Macquaria novemaculeata adults move downstream into estuaries to spawn in water of suitable salinity. In low rainfall years, the spawning location is further upstream than in wet years, when spawning can occur in shallow coastal waters adjacent to estuaries. Mature M. novemaculeata adults can be found outside of estuaries in wet years. This is verified by the collection of mature adults by trawl in July 1995 in 11–17 m of water off Newcastle, NSW.
This kind of movement leads to some genetic interchange between river systems and is important in maintaining a high degree of genetic homogeneity in Australian bass stocks and preventing speciation. However, this movement has not prevented distinct genetic profiles and subtle morphological differences developing in different river systems. These findings, along with research showing significant differences in seasonal timing of spawning and migration in far south populations stress the importance of using appropriate regional Australian bass stocks for artificial breeding and stocking projects.