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Publications

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

Filter Total Items: 2679

Hydrological, morphometrical, and biological characteristics of the connecting rivers of the International Great Lakes: a review Hydrological, morphometrical, and biological characteristics of the connecting rivers of the International Great Lakes: a review

The connecting channels of the Great Lakes are large rivers (1, 200-9, 900 m3 • s-1) with limited tributary drainage systems and relatively stable hydrology (about 2:1 ration of maximum to minimum flow). The rivers, from headwaters to outlet, are the St. Marys, St. Clair, Detroit, Niagara, and St. Lawrence. They share several characteristics with certain other large rivers: the fish...
Authors
Clayton J. Edwards, Patrick L. Hudson, Walter G. Duffy, Stephen J. Nepszy, Clarence D. McNabb, Robert C. Haas, Charles R. Liston, Bruce Manny, Wolf-Dieter N. Busch

Field test of a bioassay procedure for assessing habitat quality on fish spawning grounds Field test of a bioassay procedure for assessing habitat quality on fish spawning grounds

A bioassay procedure to assess habitat quality was tested on Port Austin reef in southern Lake Huron, a spawning area of lake trout Salvelinus namaycush. In 1986, Plexiglas incubators filled with fertilized lake trout eggs were buried by scuba divers in rock rubble at two sites. The incubators then were attached to chains between large trap-net anchors on the bottom and left over winter...
Authors
Bruce A. Manny, David J. Jude, Randy L. Eshenroder

ROV dives under Great Lakes ice ROV dives under Great Lakes ice

Observations of the underside of ice have a wide variety of applications. Severe under-ice roughness can affect ice movements, rough under-ice surfaces can scour the bottom disturbing biota and man-made structures such as pipelines, and the flow rate of rivers is often affected by under-ice roughness. A few reported observations of the underside of an ice cover have been made, usually by...
Authors
S. J. Bolsenga, John E. Gannon, Gregory Kennedy, D. C. North, Charles E. Herdendorf

Distribution of alewives in southeastern Lake Ontario in autumn and winter: a clue to winter mortalities Distribution of alewives in southeastern Lake Ontario in autumn and winter: a clue to winter mortalities

Alewives Alosa pseudoharengus in the Great Lakes are thought to avoid extreme cold in winter by moving to deep water where the temperature is usually highest because of inverse thermal stratification. Information collected in Lake Ontario during autumn and winter 1981–1984 with an echo sounder and bottom and midwater trawls indicated that many alewives remained at depths above 110 m...
Authors
Roger A. Bergstedt, Robert O’Gorman

Potential effects of shipping on submersed macrophytes in the St. Clair and Detroit Rivers of the Great Lakes Potential effects of shipping on submersed macrophytes in the St. Clair and Detroit Rivers of the Great Lakes

An extensive survey of submersed macrophytes in the St. Clair and Detroit rivers revealed statistically significant differences in the composition and density of macrophyte beds in shipping channels (used by commercial vessels passing between Lakes Huron and Erie) and non-shipping channels. Of nine common macrophyte taxa, four (Characae, Potamogeton richardsonii, Potamogeton spp. narrow...
Authors
Donald W. Schloesser, Bruce A. Manny

Atlantic salmon brood stock management and breeding handbook Atlantic salmon brood stock management and breeding handbook

Anadromus runs of Atlantic salmon have been restored to the Connecticut, Merrimack, Pawcatuck, Penobscot, and St. Croix rivers in New England by the stocking of more than 8 million smolts since 1948. Fish-breeding methods have been developed that minimize inbreeding and domestication and enhance natural selection. Methods are available to advance the maturation of brood stock, control...
Authors
Harold L. Kincaid, Jon G. Stanley

Migration and control of purple loosestrife (Lythrum salicaria L.) along highway corridors Migration and control of purple loosestrife (Lythrum salicaria L.) along highway corridors

The east-west density gradient and the pattern and mode of migration of the wetland exotic, purple loosestrife (Lythrum salicaria L.), were assessed in a survey of populations along the New York State Thruway from Albany to Buffalo to determine if the highway corridor contributed to the spread of this species. During the peak flowering season of late July to early August, individual...
Authors
Douglas A. Wilcox

Development of a benthic invertebrate objective for mesotrophic Great Lakes waters Development of a benthic invertebrate objective for mesotrophic Great Lakes waters

A biological indicator of mesotrophic conditions should (1) provide an appropriate and interpretable objective; (2) be achievable if corrective measures are taken (i.e., it should be within the expected environmental range of the system); and (3) allow measurement of progress toward the objective. Historical data from the Great Lakes suggest that population density of the burrowing...
Authors
Trefor B. Reynoldson, Donald W. Schloesser, Bruce A. Manny

Effect of rearing density on poststocking survival of lake trout in Lake Ontario Effect of rearing density on poststocking survival of lake trout in Lake Ontario

Six paired lots of yearling lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) reared at densities of 41,000 and 51,000 fish per raceway during their last 9 months in the hatchery were stocked in Lake Ontario. Poststocking survival of the high-density (HD) and low-density (LD) fish was not different for the 1982 year-class. However, for the 1983 year-class, mean survival was significantly different...
Authors
Joseph H. Elrod, David E. Ostergaard, Clifford P. Schneider

Behavior of fish predators and their prey: Habitat choice between open water and dense vegetation Behavior of fish predators and their prey: Habitat choice between open water and dense vegetation

Behavior of largemouth bass, Micropterus salmoides, and northern pike, Esox lucius, foraging on fathead minnows, Pimephales promelas, or bluegills, Lepomis macrochirus, was quantified in pools with 50% cover (half the pool had artificial stems at a density of 1000 stems m−2). Both predators spent most of their time in the vegetation. Largemouth bass searched for bluegills and ambushed...
Authors
Jacqueline F. Savino, Roy A. Stein

Food of forage fishes in western Lake Erie, 1975-76 Food of forage fishes in western Lake Erie, 1975-76

In western Lake Erie in the summer and fall of 1975–1976, food eaten by seven forage fishes—emerald shiner (Notropis atherinoides), spottail shiner (Notropis hudsonius), trout-perch (Percopsis omiscomaycus), andyoung-of-the-year (YOY) of alewife (Alosa pseudoharengus), gizzard shad (Dorosoma cepedianum), white bass (Morone chrysops), and freshwater drum (Aplodi-notus grunniens)—was...
Authors
Kenneth M. Muth, Wolf-Dieter N. Busch

A comparison of aquatic macrophyte communities in regulated and non-regulated lakes, Voyageurs National Park and Boundary Waters Canoe Area, Minnesota A comparison of aquatic macrophyte communities in regulated and non-regulated lakes, Voyageurs National Park and Boundary Waters Canoe Area, Minnesota

The effects of water-level regulation on aquatic macrophyte communities, individual plant species, and potential faunal habitat were investigated in a study of two regulated lakes and an unregulated lake in northern Minnesota. Water levels in Rainy Lake and Namakan Reservoir in Voyageurs National Park are regulated by dams. Natural annual fluctuations of 1.8 m are replaced with...
Authors
James E. Meeker, Douglas A. Wilcox
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