Peacock bass (cichlids) for dinner

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duanes

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Isla Taboga Panama via Milwaukee
Peacock bass were accidentally(?) introduced to Lake Gatun in Panama many years ago, and have become well established, although they don't get as large here as S America, maybe its the pH, which can get as high as 9. A fishing jamboree is held yearly for them, and tarpon. Most of the Cichla here, average around a foot long, some as large as 8-9lbs. But I digress, a friend brought over a ton of small fillets and we had a peacock bass fry last night.

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That looks good. Is this the same lake that tilapia were introduced too? What native species can you find there?
 
There are plenty of Tilapia (they are everywhere in Panama), but the caiman and crocs, along with all the predatory birds take their toll. It is not the same lake I posted photos a while back, Gatun is giant body of water, with islands full of bats, monkeys and tapirs, and a part of the Panama Canal/Chagres river system.
Endemic cichlids are everything from Geophagus crassilabrus to Umbis, to Vieja maculacauda, to Cribroheros.
 
There are plenty of Tilapia (they are everywhere in Panama), but the caiman and crocs, along with all the predatory birds take their toll. It is not the same lake I posted photos a while back, Gatun is giant body of water, with islands full of bats, monkeys and tapirs, and a part of the Panama Canal/Chagres river system.
Endemic cichlids are everything from Geophagus crassilabrus to Umbis, to Vieja maculacauda, to Cribroheros.


So did you enjoy the peacock bass fillet?
 
The fillets were great, very subtle, light and flakey, a similar taste to beer batter fried great lakes perch, a Friday night tradition where I used to live.


Great I like perch myself would have enjoyed the feast as well lol.
 
That's great duane looks like your going good, any native fish collecting for u? Speaking of those perch the sizes are great this year hoping to get on the ice next week..
 
No fish collecting yet, on the island where I live, there aren't any fresh water fish. And even getting something to put them in is a major feat. It will happen eventually though.
 
As it happens just read this article:

http://www.upi.com/Science_News/201...k-bass-invasion-45-years-later/5891481564577/

PANAMA CITY, Panama, Dec. 12 (UPI) -- Researchers have quantified the long-term effects of an invasive predator fish on native populations in Panama. The results aren't good.

Peacock bass, Cichla monoculus, are good to eat and fun to catch. They've been exported across the globe to satisfy the appetites of sport fishermen, but fishermen aren't the only hungry ones. Peacock bass are eager predators, and have been blamed for the disappearance of native fish in several bodies of water.


One of those bodies of water is Gatun Lake, one of the main channels forming the Panama Canal.

To measure the long-term impact of peacock bass on Gatun Lake, researchers at Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute decided to replicate a survey of native fish first conducted in 1973 -- after the accidental introduction of peacock bass to the lake but before its explosion in numbers.

In 1973, STRI researchers Thomas Zaret and Robert Paine found peacock bass had extirpated 60 percent of the native freshwater fish species.

The new survey suggests the trend has continued and local species have failed to rebound, despite pressure from sport fishermen.

"Zaret and Paine recorded 12 native fish species in the Trinidad arm of Gatun Lake in 1972 before the peacock bass invasion reached that region of the lake," Diana Sharpe, an STRI scientist and postdoctoral fellow Canada's McGill University, said in a news release. "We recaptured only three of those species after extensive seining. Our study shows that despite the appeal of peacock bass as a sport fish, the introduction of a novel apex predator can have dramatic and long-lasting impacts on native communities, even in diverse tropical communities, which are sometimes thought to be more resistant to invasion."

Other invasive species have found their way into Gatun since the initial 1973 study, but research suggests most of the ecological damage is being done by peacock bass.

Researchers compared the numbers of native species in two lakes invaded by peacock bass, Gatun and Alajuela, with the numbers of native species found in Lake Bayano, a body free of peacock bass. Despite hosting other invasive predators, like the Jaguar Cichlid, Parachromis managuesis, Bayano hosts a greater abundance of native fish.

The results of the new study were published in the journal Ecology.
 
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