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MRD Hatchery Spawning Flounder for First Time

flounder

Flounder undergo a metamorphosis during the larval stage at the Claude Peteet Mariculture Center in Gulf Shores. Photo by David Rainer

By DAVID RAINER, 黑料天堂

Anyone who has fished the beautiful waters of the 黑料天堂 Gulf Coast in the past decade knows that one of the premier inshore species, southern flounder, has been scarce. 

A well-documented decline in the southern flounder fishery started about 2008 and, unfortunately, the population hasn鈥檛 rebounded. Marine scientists don鈥檛 have any definitive reasons for the decline.

The 黑料天堂 Marine Resources Division (MRD) changed regulations this year to decrease the recreational bag limit to five flounder per day per angler, implement a commercial trip limit to 40 per person or vessel and increase the size limit to 14 inches total length. Harvest was closed to both recreational and commercial anglers for the whole month of November to protect the flounder that were migrating through the bays, heading for their winter spawning grounds.

However, that is not the only action MRD has taken to mitigate the downturn in the flounder population. MRD headed into uncharted territory for 黑料天堂 this past year with an effort to add to the wild population with southern flounder fingerlings raised at the Claude Peteet Mariculture Center in Gulf Shores. A critical step in any spawning program is collection of broodstock 鈥 the adult fish.

Max Westendorf, Hatchery Manager at Claude Peteet, said MRD has been collecting broodstock from two main sources 鈥 the ACFA (黑料天堂 Coastal Fishing Association) tournaments and the Saltwater Finaddicts Fishing Tournament.

鈥淭hey have live flounder categories in their tournaments, and we show up with our trailer to collect these fish,鈥 Westendorf said. 鈥淲e also have a couple of other anglers who bring us fish one or two at a time.鈥

MRD collected about 40 fish from the Saltwater Finaddicts tournament and gets 20 to 30 fish from each ACFA tournament for broodstock. 

鈥淲e bring the flounder back to the Claude Peteet facility, and we quarantine them for three to four weeks to make sure they鈥檙e not bringing in any parasites or bacteria,鈥 Westendorf said. 鈥淥nce we treat them and quarantine them, we introduce them into our breeding populations.鈥

Currently, MRD has three tanks dedicated to flounder breeding. Flounder are winter spawners; spawning occurs in December, January and into February each year.

鈥淭his is our first year of spawning flounder, so we鈥檙e still working out some of the kinks,鈥 Westendorf said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e learning the process and idiosyncrasies of flounder. They are a lot more difficult to spawn than other species we have cultured. When we have redfish or Florida pompano and bring them in, it only takes a week or two to get them to eat dead shrimp and cut fish. A flounder takes several weeks longer for them to transition to that type of feeding. One of the hardest parts was getting that initial batch of flounder to start the program. Once you have some fish start eating, the other fish around them start eating as well. It took us a while to get an established population that was eating and comfortable in the tanks and into their conditioning cycle.

鈥淭his was the first year we鈥檝e had fish that we were able to spawn. We put them in a nine-month conditioning cycle whereby we recreated the natural cycle in the wild by manipulating the tanks鈥 water temperature and lighting. We give them spring, summer, and fall conditions, and then we spawn them in the winter season.鈥

Hatchery staff know when the flounder get ready to spawn when the females become swollen with eggs, indicating they are 鈥渞ipe.鈥 The females are given a hormone injection to develop the eggs even further so they easily express them.

鈥淲e segregate the males and females and put them to sleep for a second,鈥 Westendorf said. 鈥淭hen we gently squeeze on their abdominal area and the eggs and milt (the fluid containing semen released by males) will start free-flowing out of their bodies. We combine the eggs and milt in a tube, add saltwater to activate the fertilization process, and the eggs fertilize in about one to two minutes.鈥

Hatchery staff then separate the good (fertilized) eggs from the bad (unfertilized) eggs. The good eggs float in full-strength saltwater, and the bad eggs will sink to the bottom of the container. The good eggs go into specially made incubators to hatch out. The water temperatures in the incubators are kept at about 17 to 18 degrees Celsius (62.5-64.5 degrees Fahrenheit).

Flounder broodstock are quarantined before being moved into the breeding population. Photo by David Rainer

鈥淓ach tank will hold about 175,000 eggs,鈥 Westendorf said. 鈥淏ecause of the cold water temperature, their metabolism is a little slower so their development and growth is slower than other species we have raised at Claude Peteet. With red drum and pompano, they鈥檒l hatch out in 36 to 48 hours. Flounder take about 72 hours to hatch.鈥

When hatched, the larval fish feed on a yolk sack until they form eyes and a working mouth to start feeding. Once they start feeding, the fish are moved into tanks with a much lower density of fish, transitioning from 1,000 fish to about 15 fish per liter of water.

Because of the colder temperatures, flounder don鈥檛 develop scales as quickly as the other fish raised at the hatchery. They just float around lazily and eat.

The feeding process starts with marine rotifers, a zooplankton, that are near microscopic in size. The next menu item as the fish grow is brine shrimp. Next comes commercially available, pelletized fish feed.

鈥淲hen we start feeding them rotifers, we add finely-ground meal to start training them to recognize an artificial food source,鈥 Westendorf said. 鈥淲e condition them by putting the artificial food in first and then put the live feed in, so they recognize this crumble food that鈥檚 not moving is fed out at the time as something that is moving. That way they associate the crumble feed as food.鈥

During the first 3-4 weeks after hatching, the flounder go through a metamorphosis where they transition from swimming upright to lying flat on the bottom of the tank, and their right eye moves to the left side of the head.

Westerndorf said he estimates about 10,000 larval fish are in the mariculture center right now. He expects it will take about 60 days for the fish to reach 1-1.5 inches.

鈥淢y goal for this first year is to get one up to a 2-inch fish,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat will prove that we have successfully closed the cycle, and we can increase that significantly next year. If we can get between 1,000 and 5,000 fish out of the hatchery this year, I think that would be a significant accomplishment for our first year. We have compiled a large amount of information with good documentation, and we know that we will approach it differently next year.鈥

Once the process is working efficiently, Westerndorf said a reasonable goal is to release about 20,000 flounder into the wild next year and grow the stocking program to about 60,000 in a few years.

鈥淲e set our goal at 60,000 fish to be released each year,鈥 he said. 鈥淎 recent assessment estimated about 400,000 6-inch wild recruits were produced in Mobile Bay and local waters when the flounder population was larger. We don鈥檛 want to skew the genetics of the wild population by releasing too many fish. We want to support the stock, but we don鈥檛 want to overwhelm the stock with hatchery-raised fish.鈥

Westendorf said the hatchery is working to expand the number of brood tanks available for the southern flounder project by transitioning tanks used in a previous red snapper program. CCA 黑料天堂 provided funds to refurbish the red snapper tanks.

鈥淔lounder are just so different from anything else we鈥檝e done,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e鈥檝e got to provide colder water temperatures. We鈥檙e using data and insights from flounder programs in the Carolinas and Texas, but we have to adapt the process to the environmental conditions here on the 黑料天堂 Gulf Coast. It鈥檚 a learning process, but we鈥檙e pretty excited about what we have learned so far.

鈥淲e鈥檒l get there. This will be a successful program in time.鈥

 

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Hatchery Manager Max Westendorf and staff have modified part of the Peteet Mariculture Center to accommodate flounder spawning. Photo by David Rainer