Percid fishes are found in lakes that cover a wide range of trophic conditions. The responses of percids and their habitats to progressive cultural eutrophication are predictable. Alterations in physicochemical characteristics of habitats precipitate changes in phytoplankton, macrophytes, zooplankton, and benthos that are ultimately deleterious. Enrichment can lead to favorable responses in percids, but somewhere in the continuum of trophic conditions the responses become unfavorable. The relative level at which the response becomes negative varies with the species according to tolerances to altered environment, adaptabilities to new habitat and forage base, and reproductive behavior. Progressive eutrophication acts as a selective mechanism that leads to a predictable sequence of fish species. Other perturbations, such as exploitation and habitat modification, can act synergistically with cultural eutrophication in accelerating the sequence. As eutrophication proceeds, the succession of species may not le...