Abstract
The upper basin or Obersee of the Bodensee still retains all the fish species described more than four centuries ago, though rapid changes have recently been noted in many aspects of the fish community and of the Bodensee ecosystem. Though a variety of non-native species have been introduced, including a number of European and North American salmonids, none has become a prominent part of the community. The famous Blaufelchen, a pelagic coregonine, has recently been threatened by a combination of increasingly intensive exploitation, beginning at a low minimum size, compounded by an increasing growth rate of the species due to low population density, and due to increased planktonic food as a result of eutrophication. Consequently, by the early 1960s, the fishery came to exploit large yearlings, and few Blaufelchen survived to spawn. Eutrophication has reached a stage that is marginal to a number of deeper, benthic coregonines and char. Cyprinids, usually inshore, have expanded greatly, have invaded the pelagic habitat, and are subject to periodic mass mortalities. Other of man's effects are identified as are management measures now in practice.