Golden perch
Macquaria ambigua
Also known as: Yellowbelly, Callop, Murray perch, White perch (regional)
Quick facts
- Adult size
- 45 cm, 1500 g typical harvest weight
- Days to harvest
- 540 to 1095 days from fingerling
- Lifespan (max)
- up to 26 years
- Diet
- carnivore
- Temperature class
- warm-water
- Difficulty
- intermediate
Water parameters
- Temperature range
- 10–32°C (optimum 24°C)
- pH
- 6.5 to 8.5
- Hardness
- 5 to 30 dGH
- Minimum tank
- 500 L per individual at harvest size
Feed and growth
- Feed protein
- 42% target
- Daily feed (warm water)
- 1.20% of body weight per day
- Daily feed (cool water)
- 0.50% of body weight per day
- Max stocking density
- 35 g per litre of system water
A 1500g adult eats about 18.0 g of feed per day at optimum temperature. For a roster of 10 fish at adult size, that's around 180 g of feed daily.
Legality
Aquaculture and possession rules vary by jurisdiction and change over time. This table reflects regulations as of the verified date on each row. Verify with your local fisheries or wildlife authority before stocking.
| Jurisdiction | Status | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| New South Wales | legal | Native species; aquaculture from licensed hatchery fingerlings does not require special permit verified 2026-05-13 |
| Victoria | permit required | Permit required outside native range verified 2026-05-13 |
| Western Australia | prohibited | verified 2026-05-13 |
Jurisdictions not listed here default to "check local regulations". A non-listing is not a green light; rules in your specific county or municipality may apply.
Habitat and origin
Native to the Murray-Darling River basin and other inland drainages across eastern Australia. The species (Macquaria ambigua) is one of Australia's most important native freshwater sport and food fish, commonly called yellowbelly or callop depending on the region. Found in turbid, slow-moving rivers, billabongs, and lakes. Adults reach 5–8 kg in the wild, though culture and aquaponics harvest size is typically 400–800 g. The flesh is white, firm, and well-flavored, popular in the Australian domestic market. Golden perch are warm-water fish that tolerate a wider temperature range than most Australian native species, including both summer heat and winter cold that would kill barramundi.
Climate and outdoor ponds
- Climate classification
- subtropical (tolerates mild cooling)
- Outdoor pond zones (USDA)
- 8 to 13 (winter low around -12°C or warmer)
- Heating in a temperate climate
- Required for year-round operation
- Cooling in a temperate climate
- Not required
Zone bounds reflect year-round outdoor pond viability with no active heating. Anywhere outside the bounded zone, the species can still be kept in an indoor heated tank or a seasonally-managed system. Verify your specific microclimate, as a sheltered yard zone can run a half-zone warmer than the regional rating.
Care notes
A warm-water to temperate aquaponics species well-suited to Australian conditions, particularly in the Murray-Darling basin and inland regions where temperature extremes are significant. Optimal growth temperature is 23–28°C, but the species tolerates 4–35°C and survives Australian winters without supplemental heating in most mainland locations (excluding alpine areas). This broad temperature flexibility is a major advantage over barramundi, which needs 26–30°C year-round and dies below 15°C. Growth: 400–800 g in 12-18 months on commercial pellet (40-45% protein). FCR is approximately 1.5-2.0. Stocking density: 15-25 g/L. Golden perch accept pelleted feed readily when trained as small fingerlings (under 5 cm) but are very reluctant to convert if initially raised on live food. Source feed-trained fingerlings from established Australian hatcheries and verify that the fish are pellet-weaned before purchase. Water quality requirements are moderate and forgiving: DO above 4 mg/L, ammonia below 1 mg/L, pH 6.5-8.5. The species naturally inhabits turbid water and is less stressed by suspended particulates than trout or perch. Fingerlings are widely available from government fish hatcheries and private breeders across eastern Australia, with supply peaking in spring and summer. Legal to culture in all states within its native range without special permits, which simplifies regulatory compliance compared to non-native species like tilapia. Golden perch fill the same practical niche in Australian aquaponics that bluegill fills in American systems: a legal, native species with excellent eating qualities, broad temperature tolerance, and good availability.
Plan a system with Golden perch
Verified against: fao-fisheries-aquaculture. Last reviewed 2026-05-15.