Four treatments of naturally occurring plants and planted rice were evaluated as forages in experimental crawfish ponds. Their relationships to biomass production, dawn dissolved oxygen, unstable water levels, and crawfish production were determined.
Total standing biomass of forage at fall flooding was significantly lower (P < 0.01) for alligatorweed plus volunteer vegetation ponds compared with all other forage regimes. Average dawn dissolved oxygen during the first 5 weeks after flooding varied between 1.7 mg/l and 4.7 mg/l in ponds containing alligatorweed, compared with 1.0 mg/l and 1.5 mg/l in ponds containing other vegetation. Crawfish yields in kg/ha for ponds with stable water levels were: rice plus alligatorweed, 2852; rice only, 2652; rice plus volunteer vegetation, 2117. These forage treatments appeared to sustain the crawfish population, and stunting of crawfish at unmarketable sizes was not observed.