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

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Wetland and aquatic macrophytes as indicators of anthropogenic hydrologic disturbance Wetland and aquatic macrophytes as indicators of anthropogenic hydrologic disturbance

Hydrologic disturbance can affect wetland and aquatic macrophyte communities by creating temporal changes in soil moisture or water depth. Such disturbances are natural and help maintain wetland diversity; however, anthropogenic changes in wetland hydrology may have negative effects on wetlands. Since plant communities respond to habitat alterations, observations of plant-community...
Authors
Douglas A. Wilcox

Chronic bioassays of rainbow trout fry with compounds representative of contaminants in Great Lakes fish Chronic bioassays of rainbow trout fry with compounds representative of contaminants in Great Lakes fish

To evaluate the hazard of organic compounds detected in Great Lakes fish by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry, we tested compounds representative of heterocyclic nitrogen compounds, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, and cyclic alkanes and alkenes. Sixty-day bioassays on the effects of nicotine, phenanthrene, pinane, and pinene on the behavior, growth, and survival of rainbow trout fry
Authors
Dora R. Passino-Reader, William H. Berlin, James P. Hickey

Diet and feeding periodicity of ruffe in the St. Louis River estuary, Lake Superior Diet and feeding periodicity of ruffe in the St. Louis River estuary, Lake Superior

Ruffe Gymnocephalus cernuus, a percid native to Europe and Asia, is established in the Lake Superior drainage and could have negative impacts on native fish through competition for forage and predation on fish eggs. We investigated the diet of ruffes in the 4,654-ha St. Louis River estuary in May–October 1989–1990 and the feeding periodicity of ruffes in two adjacent habitats during five...
Authors
Derek H. Ogle, James H. Selgeby, Raymond M. Newman, Mary G. Henry

Predator-prey relations and competition for food between age-0 lake trout and slimy sculpins in the Apostle Island region of Lake Superior Predator-prey relations and competition for food between age-0 lake trout and slimy sculpins in the Apostle Island region of Lake Superior

Slimy sculpins (Cottus cognatus) are an important component of the fish community on reefs and adjacent nursery areas of the Great Lakes and overlap spatially with age-0 lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush). Important interactions between these fishes are possible during the lake trout's first year of life, which could include predation on each other's eggs and larvae, and competition for...
Authors
Patrick L. Hudson, Jacqueline F. Savino, Charles R. Bronte

Hatching, dispersal, and bathymetric distribution of age-0 wild lake trout at the Gull Island Shoal complex, Lake Superior Hatching, dispersal, and bathymetric distribution of age-0 wild lake trout at the Gull Island Shoal complex, Lake Superior

We studied age-0 lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) associated with spawning and nursery areas of the Gull Island Shoal complex in western Lake Superior. Post-emergent age-0 lake trout were captured on rocky spawning substrate with a 3-m beam trawl and at the nursery area with a bottom trawl from June to September 1990 and June to August 1991. Catch data suggested that age-0 lake trout...
Authors
Charles R. Bronte, James H. Selgeby, James H. Saylor, Gerald S. Miller, Neal R. Foster

The role of wetlands as nearshore habitat in Lake Huron The role of wetlands as nearshore habitat in Lake Huron

Wetlands are generally considered to be among the most productive habitats on earth. As the landscape connection between upland and aquatic ecosystems, they posess many of the attributes of both systems and perform functions that extend beyond the wetland boundary into both systems. In Lake Huron, wetlands comprise a small fraction of the total area, but they provide nearshore habitat...
Authors
Douglas A. Wilcox

Availability of lake trout reproductive habitat in the Great Lakes Availability of lake trout reproductive habitat in the Great Lakes

A decades-long program to reestablish self-sustaining stocks of lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) in the four lower Great Lakes produced excellent fisheries supported by stocked fish. These fish spawned widely and small numbers of their offspring were collected intermittently from Lakes Michigan, Huron, and Ontario, but no self-sustaining stocks were established. Irt this paper we...
Authors
Thomas A. Edsall, Gregory W. Kennedy

Limitations to lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) rehabilitation in the Great Lakes imposed by biotic interactions occurring at early life stages Limitations to lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) rehabilitation in the Great Lakes imposed by biotic interactions occurring at early life stages

We examine evidence that biotic factors, particularly predation, may be limiting early survival of wild lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) juveniles in many areas of the Great Lakes. The Great Lakes contain numerous potential predators of lake trout eggs and fry, some of which are recent invaders, and most of which were probably absent when lake trout most recently re-invaded the Great...
Authors
Michael L. Jones, Gary W. Eck, David O. Evans, Mary C. Fabrizio, Michael H. Hoff, Patrick L. Hudson, John Janssen, David Jude, Robert O’Gorman, Jacqueline F. Savino

Evidence for lack of homing by sea lampreys Evidence for lack of homing by sea lampreys

Recently metamorphosed sea lampreys Petromyzon marinus were captured in the Devil River, a tributary to Lake Huron, during summer and autumn 1990. They were tagged with a coded wire tag and returned to the river to continue their migration to Lake Huron to begin the parasitic (juvenile) phase of their life. During the spawning run in spring 1992 when the tagged animals were expected to...
Authors
Roger A. Bergstedt, James G. Seelye

Status and future of Lake Huron fish communities Status and future of Lake Huron fish communities

In 1993, fishery management agencies with jurisdiction over Lake Huron fish populations developed draft fish community objectives in response to the Joint Strategic Plan for Management of Great Lakes Fisheries. The Joint Strategic Plan charged the Great Lakes Fishery Commission sponsored Lake Huron Committee to define objectives for what the fish community of Lake Huron should look like...
Authors
M.P. Ebener, J.E. Johnson, D.M. Reid, N.P. Payne, R.L. Argyle, G.M. Wright, K. Krueger, J.P. Baker, T. Morse, J. Weise

Planktivory by alewife (Alosa pseudoharengus) and rainbow smelt (Osmerus mordax) on microcrustacean zooplankton and dreissenid (Bivalvia: Dreissenidae) veligers in southern Lake Ontario Planktivory by alewife (Alosa pseudoharengus) and rainbow smelt (Osmerus mordax) on microcrustacean zooplankton and dreissenid (Bivalvia: Dreissenidae) veligers in southern Lake Ontario

The objective of this study was to describe the diet of young-of-the-year and adult alewife (Alosa pseudoharengus) and rainbow smelt (Osmerus mordax) in nearshore waters coincident with the colonization of Lake Ontario by Dreissena. Laboratory experiments and field observations indicated that alewife and rainbow smelt consumed dreissenid veligers and that the veligers remained intact and
Authors
Edward L. Mills, Robert O’Gorman, Edward F. Roseman, Connie Adams, Randall W. Owens

Use of egg traps to investigate lake trout spawning in the Great Lakes Use of egg traps to investigate lake trout spawning in the Great Lakes

Disk-shaped traps were used to examine egg deposition by lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) at 29 sites in the Great Lakes. The main objectives were to; first, evaluate the disk trap as a device for sampling lake trout eggs in the Great Lakes, and second, summarize what has been learned about lake trout spawning through the use of disk traps. Of the 5,085 traps set, 60% were classified as
Authors
Donald R. Schreiner, Charles R. Bronte, N. Robert Payne, John D. Fitzsimons, John M. Casselman
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