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Publications

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

Filter Total Items: 2677

Characterization and comparison of phytoplankton in selected lakes of five Great Lakes area national parks Characterization and comparison of phytoplankton in selected lakes of five Great Lakes area national parks

Phytoplankton species have been widely used as indicators of lake conditions, and they may be useful for detecting changes in overall lake condition. In an attempt to inventory and monitor its natural resources, the National Park Service wants to establish a monitoring program for aquatic resources in the Great Lakes Cluster National Parks. This study sought to establish baseline...
Authors
Meredith Becker Nevers, Richard L. Whitman

Characterization of Lake Michigan coastal lakes using zooplankton assemblages Characterization of Lake Michigan coastal lakes using zooplankton assemblages

Zooplankton assemblages and water quality were examined bi-weekly from 17 April to 19 October 1998 in 11 northeastern Lake Michigan coastal lakes of similar origin but varied in trophic status and limnological condition. All lakes were within or adjacent to Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore, Michigan. Zooplankton (principally microcrustaceans and rotifers) from triplicate Wisconsin...
Authors
Richard L. Whitman, Meredith B. Nevers, Maria L. Goodrich, Paul C. Murphy, Bruce M. Davis

Implications of hydrologic variability on the succession of plants in Great Lakes wetlands Implications of hydrologic variability on the succession of plants in Great Lakes wetlands

Primary succession of plant communities directed toward a climax is not a typical occurrence in wetlands because these ecological systems are inherently dependent on hydrology, and temporal hydrologic variability often causes reversals or setbacks in succession. Wetlands of the Great Lakes provide good examples for demonstrating the implications of hydrology in driving successional...
Authors
Douglas A. Wilcox

The status of Limnocalanus macrurus (Copepoda: Calanoida: Centropagidae) in Lake Erie The status of Limnocalanus macrurus (Copepoda: Calanoida: Centropagidae) in Lake Erie

The calanoid copepod Limnocalanus macrurus showed large declines in abundance and a narrowing of spatial distribution with the onset of cultural eutrophication and increases in rainbow smelt (Osmerus mordax) abundances in Lake Erie in the mid 20th century. Since 1995, however, Limnocalanus macrurus appears to have repopulated in western Lake Erie to levels of abundance that have not been...
Authors
Douglas D. Kane, John E. Gannon, David A. Culver

Time-dependent lethal body residues for the toxicity of pentachlorobenzene to Hyalella azteca Time-dependent lethal body residues for the toxicity of pentachlorobenzene to Hyalella azteca

The study examined the temporal response of Hyalella azteca to pentachlorobenzene (PCBZ) in water-only exposures. Toxicity was evaluated by calculating the body residue of PCBZ associated with survival. The concentration of PCBZ in the tissues of H. azteca associated with 50% mortality decreased from 3 to 0.5 ÎĽmol/g over the temporal range of 1 to 28 d, respectively. No significant...
Authors
Peter F. Landrum, Jeffery A. Steevens, Duane C. Gossiaux, Michael McElroy, Sander Robinson, Linda Begnoche, Sergei Chernyak, James Hickey

Comparative survival and growth of Atlantic salmon from egg stocking and fry releases Comparative survival and growth of Atlantic salmon from egg stocking and fry releases

First summer survival and subsequent growth of Atlantic salmon Salmo salar planted as eggs and fry in a tributary of Cayuga Lake, New York, were examined for 3 years. Atlantic salmon were planted in December 1999-2001 in 20 Whitlock-Vibert (W-V) egg incubators, each containing 300 eyed eggs. The following May, 500 fin-clipped Atlantic salmon fry were released in the same stream section...
Authors
James H. Johnson

Great Lakes clams find refuge from zebra mussels in restored, lake-connected marsh (Ohio) Great Lakes clams find refuge from zebra mussels in restored, lake-connected marsh (Ohio)

Since the early 1990s, more than 95 percent of the freshwater clams once found in Lake Erie have died due to the exotic zebara mussel (Dreissena polymorpha). Zebra mussels attach themselves to native clams in large numbers, impeding the ability of the clams to eat and burrow. However, in 1996, we discovered a population of native clams in Metzger Marsh in western Lake Erie (about 50...
Authors
S. Jerrine Nichols, Douglas A. Wilcox

Changing perspectives on pearly mussels, North America's most imperiled animals Changing perspectives on pearly mussels, North America's most imperiled animals

Pearly mussels (Unionacea) are widespread, abundant, and important in freshwater ecosystems around the world. Catastrophic declines in pearly mussel populations in North America and other parts of the world have led to a flurry of research on mussel biology, ecology, and conservation. Recent research on mussel feeding, life history, spatial patterning, and declines has augmented...
Authors
David L. Strayer, John A. Downing, Wendell R. Haag, Tim L. King, James B. Layzer, Teresa J. Newton, S. Jerrine Nichols

Population dynamics of bloaters Coregonus hoyi in Lake Huron, 1980-1998 Population dynamics of bloaters Coregonus hoyi in Lake Huron, 1980-1998

I investigated population dynamics of bloaters Coregonus hoyi in Lake Huron using data collected during 1980-1998 from fixed-site trawl surveys. Bloaters were uncommon in 1980, but abundance increased during 1980-1992 through a series of strong year classes. High adult abundance appeared to suppress recruitment after 1992, and the population subsequently declined. Growth was similar...
Authors
Jeffrey S. Schaeffer

Escherichia coli sampling reliability at a frequently closed Chicago beach: monitoring and management implications Escherichia coli sampling reliability at a frequently closed Chicago beach: monitoring and management implications

Monitoring beaches for recreational water quality is becoming more common, but few sampling designs or policy approaches have evaluated the efficacy of monitoring programs. The authors intensively sampled water for E. coli (N=1770) at 63rd Street Beach, Chicago for 6 months in 2000 in order to (1) characterize spatial-temporal trends, (2) determine between and within transect variation...
Authors
Richard L. Whitman, Meredith B. Nevers

Rapid assessment indicator of wetland integrity as an unintended predictor of avian diversity Rapid assessment indicator of wetland integrity as an unintended predictor of avian diversity

Rapid assessment of aquatic ecosystems has been widely implemented, sometimes without thorough evaluation of the robustness of rapid assessment metrics as indicators of ecological integrity. Here, we evaluate whether the Ohio Rapid Assessment Method (ORAM) for Wetlands Version 5.0 is a useful indicator of ecological integrity beyond its intended purpose. ORAM was developed to categorize...
Authors
Martin A. Stapanian, Thomas A. Waite, Gregory Krzys, John J. Mack, Mick Micacchion

The nearshore benthic invertebrate community of southern Lake Michigan and its response to beach nourishment The nearshore benthic invertebrate community of southern Lake Michigan and its response to beach nourishment

The nearshore benthic environment of Lake Michigan represents a dynamic and little studied habitat. To explore the biology and response of this community to beach nourishment, Ponar samples were taken at 1.5, 3, and 6 m depths at 10 transects along the southern shore of Lake Michigan before and after beach nourishment. Forty taxa were identified, and two of these, Chaetogaster...
Authors
E.L. Garza, R.L. Whitman
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