Publications
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Juvenile rainbow trout production in New York tributaries of Lake Ontario: implications for Atlantic salmon restoration Juvenile rainbow trout production in New York tributaries of Lake Ontario: implications for Atlantic salmon restoration
Three Pacific salmonid species Onchorynchus spp. have replaced the extirpated Atlantic salmon Salmo salar as the main migratory salmonid in the Lake Ontario drainage. One of those species, the nonnative rainbow trout O. mykiss, has become widely distributed within the historical Atlantic salmon habitat, occupying an ecological niche similar to that of juvenile Atlantic salmon...
Authors
James E. McKenna, James H. Johnson
Thiamine status of Cayuga Lake rainbow trout and its influence on spawning migration Thiamine status of Cayuga Lake rainbow trout and its influence on spawning migration
Rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss in Cayuga Lake, New York, appear to be suffering from a thiamine deficiency because their progeny develop general weakness, loss of equilibrium, and increased mortality, which are prevented by treatment with thiamine. Thiamine status and its effect on adults are unknown. In 2000 and 2002, we captured, tagged, and released 64 and 189 prespawning rainbow...
Authors
H. George Ketola, Thomas L. Chiotti, Robert S. Rathman, John D. Fitzsimons, Dale C. Honeyfield, Peter J. Van Dusen, Graham E. Lewis
Occurrence and growth characteristics of Escherichia coli and enterococci within the accumulated fluid of the northern pitcher plant (Sarracenia purpurea L.) Occurrence and growth characteristics of Escherichia coli and enterococci within the accumulated fluid of the northern pitcher plant (Sarracenia purpurea L.)
Sarracenia purpurea L., a carnivorous bog plant (also known as the pitcher plant), represents an excellent model of a well-defined, self-contained ecosystem; the individual pitchers of the plant serve as a microhabitat for a variety of micro- and macro-organisms. Previously, fecal indicator bacteria (Escherichia coli and enterococci) were shown as incidental contaminants in pitcher fluid...
Authors
Richard L. Whitman, Stacey E. Byers, Dawn A. Shively, Donna M. Ferguson, Muruleedhara N. Byappanahalli
An evaluation of effects of groundwater exchange on nearshore habitats and water quality of western Lake Erie An evaluation of effects of groundwater exchange on nearshore habitats and water quality of western Lake Erie
Historically, the high potentiometric surface of groundwater in the Silurian/Devonian carbonate aquifer in Monroe County, MI resulted in discharge of highly mineralized, SO4-rich groundwater to the Lake Erie shoreline near both Erie State Game Area (ESGA) and Pointe Mouillee State Game Area (PMSGA). Recently, regional groundwater levels near PMSGA have been drawn down as much as 45 m...
Authors
Sheridan K. Haack, Brian P. Neff, Donald O. Rosenberry, Jacqueline F. Savino, Scott C. Lundstrom
Ecology of the Lake Huron fish community, 1970-1999 Ecology of the Lake Huron fish community, 1970-1999
We review the status of the Lake Huron fish community between 1970 and 1999 and explore the effects of key stressors. Offshore waters changed little in terms of nutrient enrichment, while phosphorus levels declined in inner Saginaw Bay. Introduced mussels (Dreissena spp.) proliferated and may have caused a decline in Diporeia spp. This introduction could have caused a decline in lake...
Authors
Norine E. Dobiesz, David A. McLeish, Randy L. Eshenroder, James R. Bence, Lloyd C. Mohr, Mark P. Ebener, Thomas F. Nalepa, Aaron P. Woldt, James E. Johnson, Ray L. Argyle, Joseph C. Makarewicz
A potential new energy pathway in Central Lake Erie: The round goby connection A potential new energy pathway in Central Lake Erie: The round goby connection
Round gobies, invasive fish that entered Lake Erie in 1994, are altering energy, contaminant, and nutrient pathways. Our objective was to quantify how they alter energy pathways in the central basin of Lake Erie by describing their diet and identifying the degree to which predatory fish feed upon round gobies. We used bioenergetic models parameterized with data collected in the central...
Authors
T.B. Johnson, D.B. Bunnell, C.T. Knight
Discoloration of polyvinyl chloride (PVC) tape as a proxy for water-table depth in peatlands: validation and assessment of seasonal variability Discoloration of polyvinyl chloride (PVC) tape as a proxy for water-table depth in peatlands: validation and assessment of seasonal variability
Summary: 1. Discoloration of polyvinyl chloride (PVC) tape has been used in peatland ecological and hydrological studies as an inexpensive way to monitor changes in water-table depth and reducing conditions. 2. We investigated the relationship between depth of PVC tape discoloration and measured water-table depth at monthly time steps during the growing season within nine kettle...
Authors
Robert K. Booth, Sara C. Hotchkiss, Douglas A. Wilcox
Potential oxygen demand of sediments from Lake Erie Potential oxygen demand of sediments from Lake Erie
Dreissenid mussels (Dreissena polymorpha and D. bugensis) biodeposit large quantities of filtered materials (i.e., feces and pseudofeces) directly on bottom substrates. These biodeposits have the potential to increase oxygen demand in sediments and overlying waters and thus contribute to hypolimnetic anoxia in Lake Erie. We hypothesized that higher potential oxygen demand of sediments...
Authors
Don W. Schloesser, Richard G. Stickel, Thomas B. Bridgeman
Aeolian sand preserved in Silver Lake: a new signal of Holocene high stands of Lake Michigan Aeolian sand preserved in Silver Lake: a new signal of Holocene high stands of Lake Michigan
Aeolian sand within lake sediment from Silver Lake, Michigan can be used as a proxy for the timing of high lake levels of Lake Michigan.We demonstrate that the sand record from Silver Lake plotted as percent weight is in-phase with the elevation curve of Lake Michigan since the mid-Holocene Nipissing Phase. Because fluctuations in Lake Michigan's lake level are recorded in beach ridges...
Authors
Timothy G. Fisher, Walter L. Loope
Invasion history, proliferation, and offshore diet of the round goby Neogobius melanostomus in western Lake Huron, USA Invasion history, proliferation, and offshore diet of the round goby Neogobius melanostomus in western Lake Huron, USA
We used data from three trawl surveys during 1996–2003 to document range expansion, population trends, and use of offshore habitats by round gobies in the U.S. waters of Lake Huron. Round gobies (Neogobius melanostomus) were not detected in any survey until 1997, but by 2003 they had been recorded at 18 of the 28 sites sampled. The only areas not colonized were offshore habitats in...
Authors
Jeffrey S. Schaeffer, Anjanette Bowen, Michael Thomas, John R. P. French, Gary L. Curtis
Hydroacoustic estimates of abundance and spatial distribution of pelagic prey fishes in western Lake Superior Hydroacoustic estimates of abundance and spatial distribution of pelagic prey fishes in western Lake Superior
Lake herring (Coregonus artedi) and rainbow smelt (Osmerus mordax) are a valuable prey resource for the recovering lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) in Lake Superior. However, prey biomass may be insufficient to support the current predator demand. In August 1997, we assessed the abundance and spatial distribution of pelagic coregonines and rainbow smelt in western Lake Superior by...
Authors
Doran M. Mason, Timothy B. Johnson, Chris J. Harvey, James F. Kitchell, Stephen T. Schram, Charles R. Bronte, Michael H. Hoff, Stephen J. Lozano, Anett S. Trebitz, Donald R. Schreiner, E. Conrad Lamon, Thomas R. Hrabik
A novel approach to fitting the von Bertalanffy relationship to a mixed stock of Atlantic sturgeon harvested off the New Jersey Coast A novel approach to fitting the von Bertalanffy relationship to a mixed stock of Atlantic sturgeon harvested off the New Jersey Coast
We examined the growth characteristics of 303 Atlantic sturgeon, Acipenser oxyrinchus, caught in the commercial fishery off the New Jersey coast from 1992 to 1994 (fork length range: 93–219 cm). Sections taken from the leading pectoral fin ray were used to age each sturgeon. Ages ranged from 5–26 years. Von Bertalanffy growth models for males and females fit well, but test statistics (t...
Authors
James H. Johnson, James E. McKenna, David S. Dropkin, William D. Andrews