Australian bass
(Percalates novemaculeata)

Classification

Species: Percalates novemaculeata

General data

Scientific names: Australian bass
Habitat: Catadromous
Climate: Subtropical
Distribution:

The Australian bass (Macquaria novemaculeata) is a small to medium-sized, primarily freshwater (but estuarine spawning) species of fish found in coastal rivers and streams along the east coast of Australia.

Australian bass is an important member of the native fish assemblages found in east coast river systems. It is a predatory native fish and an extremely popular angling species. The species was simply called perch in most coastal rivers where it was caught until the 1960s, when the name Australian bass started to gain popularity.

Description and size

Australian bass have a moderately deep, elongated body that is laterally compressed. They have a forked caudal (tail) fin and angular anal and soft dorsal fins. Their spiny dorsal fin is relatively high, strong and sharp. They have a medium-sized mouth and relatively large eyes than can appear dark in low light or red in bright light. The opercula or gill covers on Australian bass carry extremely sharp flat spines that can cut fishermens fingers deeply.

Australian bass vary in colour from metallic gold in clear sandy streams to the more usual bronze or bronze-green colouration in streams with darker substrates and/or some tannin staining to the water.

Australian bass are, overall, a smallish-sized species. Wild river fish average around 0.4–0.5 kg and 20–30 cm. A river fish of 1 kg or larger is a good specimen. Maximum size in rivers appears to be around 2.5 kg and 55 cm in southern waters, and around 3.0 kg and 60–65 cm in northern waters. Australian bass stocked in man-made impoundments (where they cannot breed) grow to greater average and maximum weights than this.

Range

Australian bass are found in coastal rivers and streams from Wilsons Promontory in Victoria east and north along the eastern seaboard to the rivers and creeks of the Bundaberg region in central Queensland.

Australian bass are not found in the Murray-Darling system. Although the system is extensive, it terminates in a sequence of lakes and lagoons and has only one shallow and changeable entrance to the Southern Ocean - features that appear to be incompatible with the estuarine breeding habits of Australian bass and other aspects of their life cycle.

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