texasfishingforum.com logo
Main Menu
Advertisement
Affiliates
Advertisement
Newest Members
KoreanFishMonger69, MurphJax, saminator01, avences, RevCDale
119192 Registered Users
Top Posters(All Time)
TexDawg 119,861
Bigbob_FTW 95,460
John175☮ 85,926
Pilothawk 83,277
Bob Davis 82,635
Mark Perry 72,521
Derek 🐝 68,322
JDavis7873 67,416
Forum Statistics
Forums59
Topics1,039,160
Posts13,960,164
Members144,192
Most Online39,925
Dec 30th, 2023
Print Thread
Duckweed #13631866 07/15/20 07:40 PM
Joined: Mar 2010
Posts: 1,975
T
thrashfish Online Content OP
Extreme Angler
OP Online Content
Extreme Angler
T
Joined: Mar 2010
Posts: 1,975
How do I get rid of this in a small pond short of draining it and starting over?

Re: Duckweed [Re: thrashfish] #13632295 07/16/20 12:57 AM
Joined: Apr 2009
Posts: 2,753
Outdoordude Offline
Extreme Angler
Offline
Extreme Angler
Joined: Apr 2009
Posts: 2,753
Herbicides with active ingredients bispyribac sodium, fluridone, penoxsulam, or flumioxazin (in rough order of cheapest to most expensive options) will kill it. May need to reapply to keep it under control through the end of the year.

20 lbs of tilapia per acre can work if there aren't lots of largemouth.

65 lbs of goldfish per acre can work if there aren't lots of largemouth.

The root of the problem is excessive phosphorous so it'll keep coming back until that's addressed. You can use phosphorous binders, phoslock is an expensive but well known example, aeration especially down at the pond bottom, and apparently some of the muck-clearing bacteria treatments do actually help to my surprise (but they work best when combined with aeration - they're mostly aerobic bacteria). Alum can bind nutrients but it's not as widely accepted for that purpose, it's more of a clay/mud clearing tool. And, you can drain the pond, dredge the sediment/sludge out and start fresh and new. Duckweed is one of the tough ones to deal with.


Scott Jones
Re: Duckweed [Re: thrashfish] #13633134 07/16/20 06:25 PM
Joined: Mar 2010
Posts: 1,975
T
thrashfish Online Content OP
Extreme Angler
OP Online Content
Extreme Angler
T
Joined: Mar 2010
Posts: 1,975
Thank you for the advice!

Re: Duckweed [Re: Outdoordude] #13636071 07/19/20 04:28 PM
Joined: Jan 2018
Posts: 306
M
Marc-62 Offline
Angler
Offline
Angler
M
Joined: Jan 2018
Posts: 306
Great advice, I have a question 20 lbs of tilapia per acre is that 20 1lb fish or fingerlings. Same question with goldfish .

Re: Duckweed [Re: Marc-62] #13636104 07/19/20 05:11 PM
Joined: Mar 2014
Posts: 404
D
DarrellSimpson Offline
Angler
Offline
Angler
D
Joined: Mar 2014
Posts: 404
From my understanding when getting this kind of advice on the Pond Boss forum 1 lb of fish represents a single 1 lb or 1 lb of smaller fish . Though sometimes the advice for fingerlings will change depending on the what is already established in the body of water that will possibly feed on what ever fits in their mouth . When getting advice on grass carp the advice for minnows gets more lbs per acre because of attrition .

Re: Duckweed [Re: thrashfish] #13637053 07/20/20 03:13 PM
Joined: Apr 2009
Posts: 2,753
Outdoordude Offline
Extreme Angler
Offline
Extreme Angler
Joined: Apr 2009
Posts: 2,753
Derrell's got it. You get more bang for your buck with fingerlings but they are at higher risk of predation. Your nearest hatchery or fish truck delivery route may not have size options on the species you're trying to stock so if all they have is small fingerlings and you have lots of hungry bass in the pond you should probably stock a bit heavier to compensate for predator loss.

Also, remember on tilapia that they will probably die in the winter (less than about 55 F degrees is lethal to them) so you'll have a couple weeks of fish kill to look at in winter and you'll need to restock them in the spring if you want their service to continue next year.


Scott Jones
Re: Duckweed [Re: thrashfish] #13637207 07/20/20 05:20 PM
Joined: Sep 2007
Posts: 166
gillom Offline
Outdoorsman
Offline
Outdoorsman
Joined: Sep 2007
Posts: 166
Sit over it with a 12 ga and a half dozen gaddy dekes in January.

Re: Duckweed [Re: thrashfish] #13647274 07/28/20 11:36 AM
Joined: Apr 2005
Posts: 662
D
Dave Davidson Offline
Pro Angler
Offline
Pro Angler
D
Joined: Apr 2005
Posts: 662
It all depends on how much DW you have. If not much, you can spot treat it. If its an infestation, nuke about 1/4 of the pond at a time. If you do the whole thing at once, the rotting vegetation robs O2 for the water generally resulting in a fish kill. The fish need somewhere to go where there is still O2.

Previous Thread
Index
Next Thread

© 1998-2022 OUTDOOR SITES NETWORK all rights reserved USA and Worldwide
Powered by UBB.threads™ PHP Forum Software 7.7.3