The zander ( Sander lucioperca), sander or pikeperch, is a species of ray-finned fish from the family Percidae, which also includes perch, Gymnocephalus and Etheostomatinae. It is found in freshwater and brackish habitats in western Eurasia. It is a popular game fish and has been introduced to a variety of localities outside its native range. It is the type species of the genus Sander.
Fossil remains of S. lucioperca are known from the Late Miocene and Pliocene of Ukraine. They appear to have coexisted with the extinct pikeperches Sander svetovidovi and Leobergia.
The zander has a maximum published fish measurement , although they are more commonly found at around . This species can reach of weight, although typical catches are considerably smaller. The IGFA All-Tackle world record zander was caught in Lago Maggiore, Switzerland in June 2016 weighing . Zander reach an average length of with a maximum length of .
In the UK, zander was originally introduced in 1878 by Francis Russell, 9th Duke of Bedford, into lakes on his Woburn Abbey estate and soon after that into the Great Ouse Relief Channel in The Fens. British Waterways included zander among a "dirty dozen" non-native species most likely to harm native wildlife along rivers in Great Britain.
Their success in establishing themselves was owed to a number of factors, one of which is that they are particularly well adapted to life in the slow-flowing, sparsely vegetated, rather murky waters that comprise so many of the British lowland rivers."Foreign Fishes", The Living Countryside magazine (issue 36), p.706 Zander thrive in water with rather low visibility, unlike pike, which often dominate the predator fish niche in clear water. However, zander need plenty of oxygen and soon disappear from eutrophic areas.
Zander were fish stocking in Spiritwood Lake, North Dakota in 1989 and have remained ever since. Ecologists believe that if establishment occurs in the Great Lakes they will compete with game fish such as the closely related Walleye or the Yellow perch for predation and habitat. Therefore the Government of Ontario is preemptively treating zander as a future invasive species.
In the Netherlands, zander may be found (natively) in many major waterways, including the Waal, Hollands Diep, and other distributaries or estuaries of the Rhine, and are also particularly common in the canals of Amsterdam.
Recorded predators of the zander include other zanders, as well as ( Anguilla anguilla), Northern pike, European perch, the wels catfish ( Silurus glanis) and the Caspian seal ( Phoca caspia).
In 2004, it was revealed that some restaurants in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area of Minnesota were serving imported zander instead of the closely related North American walleye (the state fish, and a popular food in the region). While zander and walleye are almost indistinguishable by taste, the restaurants were selling the European fish under the name "walleye", which is an illegal practice. An investigation by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration followed.
In Ohio, many restaurants were caught using juvenile zander fillets in the 40 to 80 gram range in place of the Lake Erie yellow perch. Shortages of the perch along with skyrocketing prices caused wholesalers and restaurants to use the juvenile zander for popular "pike perch fillets".
In Finland, as a conservation measure, the law regulates the minimum size of zander considered mature enough to be eaten.
In July 2009, in a rare occurrence, a zander bit bathers swimming in the Swiss part of Lake Maggiore, sending two people to the emergency room; the worst bite inflicted a wound about 10 centimeters long. The 70-cm 8-kg fish was later caught by the local police who cooked it and offered it to the tourists for the trouble it caused.
As the largest member of the perch family, zander is a popular game fish in the United Kingdom. However, its status as non-native invasive species means there are strict legal restrictions: any zander caught by anglers in the UK cannot be returned to the water and must be destroyed.
Distribution
Habitat and biology
Habitat
Diet
Reproduction
Life history
Parasites and predators
Use by humans
Aquaculture
External links
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