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Publications

Welcome to the Great Lakes Science Center's Publications page.

Filter Total Items: 2694

Restoration of wildcelery, Vallisneria americana Michx., in the lower Detroit River of the Lake Huron-Lake Erie Corridor Restoration of wildcelery, Vallisneria americana Michx., in the lower Detroit River of the Lake Huron-Lake Erie Corridor

American wildcelery (Vallisneria americana Michx.) is a valuable submersed aquatic plant that was negatively affected by pollution and urban runoff in the lower Detroit River for much of the 20th century. Following 25 years of water-pollution and urban-runoff abatement initiated in the early 1970s, we postulated that water clarity had increased and that this would allow restoration of...
Authors
D. W. Schloesser, B.A. Manny

Direct and indirect estimates of natural mortality for Chesapeake Bay blue crab Direct and indirect estimates of natural mortality for Chesapeake Bay blue crab

Analyses of the population dynamics of blue crab Callinectes sapidus have been complicated by a lack of estimates of the instantaneous natural mortality rate (M). We developed the first direct estimates of M for this species by solving Baranov's catch equation for M given estimates of annual survival rate and exploitation rate. Annual survival rates were estimated from a tagging study on...
Authors
D.A. Hewitt, D.M. Lambert, J.M. Hoenig, Romuald N. Lipcius, D.B. Bunnell, T.J. Miller

Drying temperature effects on fish dry mass measurements Drying temperature effects on fish dry mass measurements

Analysis of tissue composition in fish often requires dry samples. Time needed to dry fish decreases as temperature is increased, but additional volatile material may be lost. Effects of 10??C temperature increases on percentage dry mass (%DM) were tested against 60??C controls for groups of lake trout Salvelinus namaycush, rainbow smelt Osmerus mordax, slimy sculpin Cottus cognatus, and...
Authors
B.F. Lantry, R. O'Gorman

Big lake records preserved in a little lake's sediment: An example from Silver Lake, Michigan, USA Big lake records preserved in a little lake's sediment: An example from Silver Lake, Michigan, USA

We reconstruct postglacial lake-level history within the Lake Michigan basin using soil stratigraphy, ground-penetrating radar (GPR), sedimentology and 14C data from the Silver Lake basin, which lies adjacent to Lake Michigan. Stratigraphy in nine vibracores recovered from the floor of Silver Lake appears to reflect fluctuation of water levels in the Lake Michigan basin. Aeolian activity...
Authors
T.G. Fisher, W.L. Loope, W. Pierce, H.M. Jol

Diel periodicity of drift of larval fishes in tributaries of Lake Ontario Diel periodicity of drift of larval fishes in tributaries of Lake Ontario

Diel patterns of downstream drift were examined during mid-June in three tributaries of Lake Ontario. Larval fishes were collected in drift nets that were set in each stream for 72 consecutive hours and emptied at 4-h intervals. Fantail darter (Ethostoma flabellare) and blacknose dace (Rhinichthys atractulus) were the two most abundant native stream fishes and were two of the three...
Authors
J. H. Johnson, J.E. McKenna

Shell-free biomass and population dynamics of dreissenids in offshore Lake Michigan, 2001-2003 Shell-free biomass and population dynamics of dreissenids in offshore Lake Michigan, 2001-2003

The USGS-Great Lakes Science Center has collected dreissenid mussels annually from Lake Michigan since zebra mussels (Dreissena polymorpha) became a significant portion of the bottom-trawl catch in 1999. For this study, we investigated dreissenid distribution, body mass, and recruitment at different depths in Lake Michigan during 2001-2003. The highest densities of dreissenid biomass...
Authors
J. R. P. French, J.V. Adams, J. Craig, R.G. Stickel, S. J. Nichols, G.W. Fleischer

Distinguishing wild vs. stocked lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) in Lake Ontario: Evidence from carbon and oxygen stable isotope values of otoliths Distinguishing wild vs. stocked lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) in Lake Ontario: Evidence from carbon and oxygen stable isotope values of otoliths

We investigated the potential for using carbon and oxygen isotope values of otolith carbonate as a method to distinguish naturally produced (wild) lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) from hatchery-reared lake trout in Lake Ontario. We determined δ 13C(CaCO3) and δ 18O(CaCO3) values of otoliths from juvenile fish taken from two hatcheries, and of otoliths from wild yearlings. Clear...
Authors
T. Schaner, W.P. Patterson, B.F. Lantry, R. O'Gorman

TiO2 as a photocatalyst for control of the aquatic invasive alga, Cladophora, under natural and artificial light TiO2 as a photocatalyst for control of the aquatic invasive alga, Cladophora, under natural and artificial light

Cladophora, a nuisance and invasive, filamentous algae (Chlorophyta), massively accumulates along the shores of the lower Great Lakes each summer causing great economic damage and compromising recreational opportunity and perhaps public health. In vitro experiments showed that Cladophora samples were physically and biologically degraded when subjected to TiO2-mediated photocatalysis. For...
Authors
J.R. Peller, R.L. Whitman, S. Griffith, P. Harris, C. Peller, J. Scalzitti

Occurrence and food habits of the round goby in the profundal zone of southwestern Lake Ontario Occurrence and food habits of the round goby in the profundal zone of southwestern Lake Ontario

Little is known about the ecology of round goby (Neogobius melanostomus), an invasive benthic fish, in the profundal zone of the Great Lakes. In April 2002–2005 we caught increasing numbers of round gobies with a bottom trawl in the 45–150 m depth range of southwestern Lake Ontario. In 2005, we examined gut contents of 30 round gobies from each of three depths, 55, 95, and 130 m, and...
Authors
M. G. Walsh, D.E. Dittman, R. O'Gorman

Diet niches of major forage fish in Lake Michigan Diet niches of major forage fish in Lake Michigan

A large complex of coregonine species historically dominated the fish community of Lake Michigan. The current species complex is simplified with one remaining coregonine, bloater (Coregonus hoyi), deepwater sculpin (Myoxocephalus thompsoni), slimy sculpin (Cottus cognatus), and two dominant invaders, alewife (Alosa pseudoharengus) and rainbow smelt (Osmerus mordax). To better understand...
Authors
R. Douglas Hunter, J.F. Savino, L.M. Ogilvie

Resource availability, matrix quality, microclimate, and spatial pattern as predictors of patch use by the Karner blue butterfly Resource availability, matrix quality, microclimate, and spatial pattern as predictors of patch use by the Karner blue butterfly

Determination of which aspects of habitat quality and habitat spatial arrangement best account for variation in a species’ distribution can guide management for organisms such as the Karner blue butterfly (Lycaeides melissa samuelis), a federally endangered subspecies inhabiting savannas of Midwest and Eastern United States. We examined the extent to which three sets of predictors, (1)...
Authors
R. Grundel, N.B. Pavlovic
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