FISH COMPOSITION OF JEBBA LAKE, NIGERIA

Authors

  • J. A ABIODUN
  • F. C. ODUNZE

Keywords:

inland waters, lake impoundment, frame survey

Abstract

During the study period, from April 2008 to March 2009, 51 species of fish were recorded belonging to 12 families
in Jebba Lake. The commercially important fishes were grouped according to their economic importance into five
categories namely, Catfish (Clarias spp., Bagrus bayad, Heterobranchus spp., and Chrysichthys spp.), Tilapias
(Oreochromis niloticus and Tilapia zilli), Nile perch (Lates niloticus), Freshwater sardines (Clupeids spp.) and
others (Alestes spp., Citharinus citharus and Synodontis spp.). Three zones were classified according to their
biological and limnological characteristics. Stratum I (upstream zone) exhibits riverine conditions with rapid water
currents, and contributed 35.1% of the total catch. Stratum II (midstream zone) represents low water currents and
contributed 12.5% of the total fish catch. Stratum III (reservoir zone), which exhibits lentic habitat and contributed
52.4% of the total fish catch, due to ecological changes in the aquatic environment that provided abundant natural
fish food supply. Traditional fishing gears such as cast net, gill net, drift net, longline and fish trap were used by
fishermen. Catch per unit effort (CPUE) per landing site, ranged between 1.05 to 6.22 kg/boat with highest in June
at Rimaye landing site while lowest in February was at Faku landing site. The average annual fish landings per
fisherman ranged from 62.71 to 129.68 kg/fisherman/yr.

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Published

2011-12-01

How to Cite

ABIODUN, J. A., & ODUNZE, F. C. (2011). FISH COMPOSITION OF JEBBA LAKE, NIGERIA . Nigerian Journal of Fisheries, 8(2), 284–290. Retrieved from https://fisonjournal.org.ng/index.php/njf/article/view/299

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