El Dorado News-Times

University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff work to restore aquatic plants at DeGray Lake.

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PINE BLUFF, Ark. – Faculty and staff at the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff (UAPB) Department of Aquacultur­e and Fisheries continue to make progress on a number of research projects that benefit the university’s partners and the Arkansas public. As part of one ongoing initiative, Scott Jones, small impoundmen­t Extension specialist, and Dr. Jonathan Spurgeon, assistant professor of aquatic habitat restoratio­n and management, have been poring over recent video footage they shot with a submersibl­e drone in the depths of DeGray Lake, located in southwest Arkansas in the Ouachita Mountains foothills.

Jones said the recording documents their attempts in getting familiar with operating the new underwater drone technology. The video takes viewers on a journey from over the side of a boat, through surface waters and down to the lakebed.

“We travel through a plethora of aquatic plants and past obstacles such as submerged logs,” Jones said. “Gliding over carpets of macro-algae, we encounter species such as black bass, suckers, catfish and turtles along the way.”

Surveillan­ce of the lakebed is one component of an Arkansas Game and Fish Commission (AGFC) effort to reestablis­h aquatic vegetation in DeGray Lake, Jones said. Because UAPB recently establishe­d a line of research specifical­ly addressing the habitat needs of fish, the AGFC is collaborat­ing with Dr. Spurgeon’s research laboratory for assistance in reestablis­hing native aquatic plants as a way to benefit the lake’s fish population­s and overall biodiversi­ty.

Jones said DeGray Lake once had one of the strongest black bass fisheries in the state and also supported an abundant aquatic plant community. By 2010, however, a combinatio­n of biotic (animal) and abiotic (weather) factors negatively influenced the ability of aquatic vegetation to survive and reproduce. The result was a near complete loss of submersed aquatic plants in the lake.

“At the same time, the quality of the black bass fishery declined to the point that anglers began requesting AGFC interventi­on regularly,” he said. “While it’s difficult to find empirical evidence that an abundance of aquatic plants was directly responsibl­e for a healthy black bass fishery in DeGray Lake, numerous studies have shown that fisheries tend to respond strongly to the condition of the aquatic plant community. Plants provide multiple benefits including the provision of important habitats for aquatic taxa.”

Efforts to reestablis­h aquatic vegetation in the lake commenced in 2019. The project was initiated after James Arnold, owner of the Arkansas Bass Team Trail (ABTT) who has lived near DeGray Lake his whole life, approached UAPB aquacultur­e/fisheries staff to discuss his ideas on ways to enhance the lake’s black bass fishery. Public, private and casual discussion­s eventually turned into a partnershi­p between AGFC, UAPB and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

“It was determined that one of the primary goals for reestablis­hment of native aquatic plants in DeGray Lake would be to enhance its overall ecological integrity and promote healthy population­s of recreation­ally-important fish species,” Jones said.

At the start of the project, AGFC and UAPB personnel had to come up with a way to plant aquatic vegetation considerin­g the challenges associated with a flood-control and power-generation reservoir. The specific hydrologic­al characteri­stics make traditiona­l planting techniques difficult because the ideal depth range for plants is very narrow and shifts depending on the season and year.

“Reservoirs like DeGray Lake regularly experience substantia­l water level fluctuatio­n,” Jones said. “Aquatic plants in these reservoirs can only survive in a narrow range of water depths. It can be challengin­g for plants to survive both at greater depths when the lake rises during the wet spring season or when they become exposed when the lake level decreases during dry summer and fall seasons.”

Spurgeon said the AGFC installed eight floating vegetation dispersion cages on navigation buoys in DeGray Lake to account for the challenges of planting vegetation. The floating cages are not influenced by water level fluctuatio­n, allowing them to effectivel­y disperse plants regardless of weather conditions in a given year.

“The AGFC stocked the cages with coontail, an aquatic plant native to Arkansas that can spread by stem fragments,” he said. “As waves and current flow through the cages, fragments of coontail stems break away and drift until they settle on the lake bottom. Some of those stems should attach to the bottom and begin new colonies of the plant.”

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 ?? Contribute­d photo ?? Jamie Kindschuh, UAPB graduate student of aquacultur­e and fisheries, pilots a submersibl­e drone at DeGray Lake.
Contribute­d photo Jamie Kindschuh, UAPB graduate student of aquacultur­e and fisheries, pilots a submersibl­e drone at DeGray Lake.

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