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Publications

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Comparisons of PBDE composition and concentration in fish collected from the Detroit River, MI and Des Plaines River, IL Comparisons of PBDE composition and concentration in fish collected from the Detroit River, MI and Des Plaines River, IL

Polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) were identified in fish collected from the Detroit River, MI and Des Plaines Rivers, IL. In the Detroit River fish, carp and large mouth bass, the congener patterns were dominated by the 2,2′,4,4′-tetrabromo (BDE-47) congener; however, in Des Plaines River carp the dominant isomers were the heptabromo congeners BDE-181 and BDE-183 and lesser amounts...
Authors
C.P. Rice, S.M. Chernyak, L. Begnoche, R. Quintal, J. Hickey

Foraging locations of double-crested cormorants on western Lake Erie: Site characteristics and spatial associations with prey fish densities Foraging locations of double-crested cormorants on western Lake Erie: Site characteristics and spatial associations with prey fish densities

Radio-tagged double-crested cormorants (Phalacrocorax auritus) nesting on Middle Island, Ontario and unmarked cormorants in the western basin of Lake Erie were monitored in 1999. Radio-tagged cormorants were located by aircraft and by boat along regular survey routes. In addition, foraging flocks of radio-tagged and unmarked cormorants were located during the boat surveys. Approximately...
Authors
Martin A. Stapanian, Michael T. Bur, Jeffrey T. Tyson, Thomas W. Seamans, Bradley F. Blackwell

Overlap in offshore habitat use by double-crested cormorants and boaters in western Lake Erie Overlap in offshore habitat use by double-crested cormorants and boaters in western Lake Erie

Double-crested cormorants (Phalacrocorax auritus) and boats of 2 length classes (≤ 8 m and > 8 m) were counted from a boat along 31 established strip transects in western Lake Erie from 24 April to 1 September 2000. Each transect included only one of the following habitats: (1) offshore of a breeding island or roosting/loafing area for cormorants (“refuge”), (2) reefs or shoals, (3) open...
Authors
Martin A. Stapanian, Michael T. Bur

Ecological potential of the Grand Calumet River basin Ecological potential of the Grand Calumet River basin

The Grand Calumet River and watershed have been severely degraded by industrialization and urbanization, and yet several high-quality natural areas remain intact. The degraded condition presents numerous opportunities for pollution mitigation and ecosystem restoration. In many areas of the river and watershed, biological communities are characterized by low diversity and pollution...
Authors
Richard L. Whitman, Meredith Becker Nevers, Shira Hammann, Philip B. Moy

Little Galloo Island, Lake Ontario: A review of nine years of double-crested cormorant diet and fish consumption information Little Galloo Island, Lake Ontario: A review of nine years of double-crested cormorant diet and fish consumption information

The diet of double-crested cormorants (Phalacrocorax auritus) on Little Galloo Island (LGI) in the eastern basin of Lake Ontario has been quantified since 1992. Over the past nine years considerable information has been generated on cormorant feeding ecology through the examination of approximately 12,000 pellets collected on LGI, where three distinct cormorant feeding periods, pre-chick...
Authors
James H. Johnson, Robert M. Ross, Russ D. McCullough

Dynamics of the Lake Michigan food web, 1970-2000 Dynamics of the Lake Michigan food web, 1970-2000

Herein, we document changes in the Lake Michigan food web between 1970 and 2000 and identify the factors responsible for these changes. Control of sea lamprey (Petromyzon marinus) and alewife (Alosa pseudoharengus) populations in Lake Michigan, beginning in the 1950s and 1960s, had profound effects on the food web. Recoveries of lake whitefish (Coregonus clupeaformis) and burbot (Lota...
Authors
Charles P. Madenjian, Gary L. Fahnenstiel, Thomas H. Johengen, Thomas F. Nalepa, Henry A. Vanderploeg, Guy W. Fleischer, Philip J. Schneeberger, Darren M. Benjamin, Emily B. Smith, James R. Bence, Edward S. Rutherford, Dennis S. Lavis, Dale M. Robertson, David J. Jude, Mark P. Ebener

Reestablishing a spawning population of lake trout in Lake Superior with fertilized eggs in artificial turf incubators Reestablishing a spawning population of lake trout in Lake Superior with fertilized eggs in artificial turf incubators

Fertilized eggs from lake trout Salvelinus namaycush were placed in artificial turf incubators and deployed on Devils Island Shoal, Lake Superior, in an attempt to reestablish a spawning population on this once important spawning area. Efficacy was measured by the changes in catch rates, age composition, and origin of adult lake trout returning to the shoal in the fall in subsequent...
Authors
Charles R. Bronte, Stephen T. Schram, James H. Selgeby, Bruce L. Swanson

Evaluation of substitute diets for live algae in the captive maintenance of adult and subadult unionidae Evaluation of substitute diets for live algae in the captive maintenance of adult and subadult unionidae

Ten nonlive algal diets were evaluated as potential broodstock diets for adult and subadult unionids. These diets varied significantly in their ability to support growth, reproduction and survival. Growth, increase in glycogen stores, and limited glochidial formation were seen in most unionid species on two of the diets. However, long-term survival (>3 y) remained problematic, and the...
Authors
S. Jerrine Nichols, D. Garling

The growth-temperature relation and preferred temperatures of juvenile lake herring The growth-temperature relation and preferred temperatures of juvenile lake herring

Lake herring, Coregonus artedi, were once extremely abundant in the Great Lakes where they functioned as a major trophic integrator, directly linking the planktonic crustacean resource to lake trout. Salvelinus namaycush. Lake herring populations in the Great Lakes collapsed during the middle third of the 20th century due to overfishing, degradation of critical habitat in major...
Authors
T.A. Edsall, T.J. Desorcie

Assessing avian richness in remnant wetlands: Towards an improved methodology Assessing avian richness in remnant wetlands: Towards an improved methodology

Because the North American Breeding Bird Survey provides inadequate coverage of wetland habitat, the Wetland Breeding Bird Survey was recently established in Ohio, USA. This program relies on volunteers to conduct 3 counts at each monitored wetland. Currently, all counts are conducted during the morning. Under the premise that volunteer participation could be increased by allowing...
Authors
Greg Krzys, Thomas A. Waite, Martin Stapanian, John A. Vucetich

Field estimate of net trophic transfer efficiency of PCBs to Lake Michigan chinook salmon from their prey Field estimate of net trophic transfer efficiency of PCBs to Lake Michigan chinook salmon from their prey

Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) has been the predominant piscivore in Lakes Michigan, Huron, and Ontario since the 1970s, and therefore accurate quantification of its energy budget is needed for effective management of Great Lakes fisheries. A new approach of evaluating a fish bioenergetics model in the field involves field estimation of the efficiency with which the fish...
Authors
Charles P. Madenjian, Daniel V. O’Connor, Donald J. Stewart, Michael A. Miller, Robert G. Masnado

Comparison of 5 benthic samplers to collect burrowing mayfly nymphs (Hexagenia spp.:Ephemeroptera:Ephemeridae) in sediments of the Laurentian Great Lakes Comparison of 5 benthic samplers to collect burrowing mayfly nymphs (Hexagenia spp.:Ephemeroptera:Ephemeridae) in sediments of the Laurentian Great Lakes

The recent return of burrowing mayfly nymphs (Hexagenia spp.) to western Lake Erie of the Laurentian Great Lakes has prompted a need to find a sampler to obtain the most accurate (i.e., highest mean density) and precise (i.e., lowest mean variance) abundance estimates of nymphs. The abundance of burrowing nymphs is important because it is being used as a measure of ecosystem health to...
Authors
Don W. Schloesser, Thomas F. Nalepa
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