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First evidence of natural reproduction and recruitment of reintroduced Lake Sturgeon in the Coosa River, Georgia

May 28, 2025

Objective 

Lake Sturgeon Acipenser fluences became extirpated from the Coosa River system in Georgia and Alabama during the 1970s. The Georgia Department of Natural Resources began stocking hatchery-raised Lake Sturgeon in 2002 with the goal of reestablishing a self-sustaining population. Stocking lapsed in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, which allowed an opportunity to assess natural recruitment to the reintroduced population.

Methods

We conducted trammel-net surveys during May–August in 2022 and 2023 and removed a pectoral fin spine section from all captured individuals. We compared the fin spine sections of suspected naturally hatched juveniles with those from known-age, hatchery-raised juveniles to confirm our age estimates.

Results

We captured one age-2 juvenile Lake Sturgeon in 2022 and eight age-3 juveniles in 2023. This indicates the presence of natural recruitment due to the absence of stocking of hatchery individuals in 2020.

Conclusions

Documenting individuals of a year-class that was not created by hatchery-raised juveniles provides the first evidence that offspring of early reintroduced Lake Sturgeon are being recruited into the reintroduced population in the Coosa River, Georgia.

Publication Year 2025
Title First evidence of natural reproduction and recruitment of reintroduced Lake Sturgeon in the Coosa River, Georgia
DOI 10.1093/najfmt/vqaf037
Authors Martin Hamel, Matthew Phillips, Savannah Perry, Brian J. Irwin, John Damer
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title North American Journal of Fisheries Management
Index ID 70270725
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Coop Res Unit Atlanta
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