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Publications

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

Filter Total Items: 2699

Pesticide concentrations in Great Lakes fish Pesticide concentrations in Great Lakes fish

During the past 4 years the Ann Arbor Great Lakes Fishery Laboratory of the Bureau of Commercial Fisheries has been monitoring insecticide levels in fish from the Great Lakes. The two insecticides found in all Great Lakes fish have been DDT (DDT, DDD, DDE) and dieldrin. Fish from Lake Michigan contain from 2 to 7 times as much of these insecticides as those from the other Great Lakes...
Authors
Robert E. Reinert

A hermaphroditic coregonine from Lake Michigan A hermaphroditic coregonine from Lake Michigan

Hermaphroditism is relatively rare among the Salmonidae (See Atz, 1964 for a comprehensive review) and has never been reported for coregonine fishes. Recent examination of a collection of coregonines at the Great Lakes Fishery Laboratory disclosed a hermaphroditic bloater(Coregonus hoyi). The fish was captured in a gill net set at 50 fathoms on the bottom of Lake Michigan approximately 7...
Authors
Thomas A. Edsall

Experimental hybridization among five species of lampreys from the Great Lakes Experimental hybridization among five species of lampreys from the Great Lakes

Experimental hybridization among five species of lampreys of the Upper Great Lakes routinely produced embryos through stage 8, and four crosses produced embryos to the larval stage. Three critical periods in the embryogenesis of hybrid lampreys were between stages 8 and 9, among stages 10, 11, and 12, and at stage 15. Embryonic development in hybrid lamprey embryos is basically identical...
Authors
George W. Piavis, John H. Howell, Allen J. Smith

Temperature tolerance of bloater (Coregonus hoyi) Temperature tolerance of bloater (Coregonus hoyi)

Juvenile and young adult bloaters (Coregonus hoyi) were tested for tolerance to high temperatures. The ultimate upper lethal temperature of juvenile bloaters (26.75 C) appeared to be slightly higher than that of young adult bloaters, but was similar to that of juvenile ciscoes,Coregonus artedii (26.0 C), the only other North American coregonine for which a detailed description of...
Authors
Thomas A. Edsall, Donald V. Rottiers, Edward H. Brown

Toxicity of 33 NCS to freshwater fish and sea lamprey Toxicity of 33 NCS to freshwater fish and sea lamprey

The chemical 33NCS (3'-chloro-3-nitrosalicylanilide) was evaluated as a fish control agent and as a larvicide for sea lampreys at the Fish Control Laboratories of the Bureau of Sport Fisheries and Wildlife and the Hammond Bay Biological Station of the Bureau of Commercial Fisheries. The chemical is rapidly toxic to many species. Sea lampreys, bowfin, and channel catfish are the most...
Authors
Leif L. Marking, Everett L. King, Charles R. Walker, John H. Howell

The benthic macrofauna of Lake Ontario The benthic macrofauna of Lake Ontario

The presence and relative abundance of bottom macrofauna in Lake Ontario are documented. Bottom samples were collected at 24 stations in September 1964. The quantity of organisms and the distribution of some species were affected by depth of water. Samples from the shallower stations (47.5 m or less) yielded an average of 41,631 organisms per mA? whereas the deeper stations (91.5 m or...
Authors
Jarl K. Hiltunen

Chemical characteristics of Lake Ontario Chemical characteristics of Lake Ontario

Records are presented of Na+, K+, Ca++, SiO2, pH, alkalinity, O2, and specific conductance at 106 stations in Lake Ontario. These data are compared for east-west and surface-subsurface variations. Water quality in Lake Ontario is similar to that in Lake Erie with the exception of dissolved oxygen. The open waters of Lake Ontario had no areas of serious oxygen depletions.
Authors
Herbert E. Allen

Planktonic diatoms of Lake Ontario Planktonic diatoms of Lake Ontario

The major species of diatoms in surface collections from Lake Ontario in September 1964 were Asterionella formosa, Fragilaria crotonensis, and Tabellaris fenestrata. Dominant species in the deep-water samples were Stephanodiscus astraea, S. astraea var. mintula, and F. crotonensis. The diatom flora in surface collections varied among several stations in the eastern end of the lake.
Authors
Jerry F. Reinwand

Invertebrate macrobenthos of western Lake Superior Invertebrate macrobenthos of western Lake Superior

The present report contributes to knowledge of the relative abundance of major groups of benthic invertebrates in western Lake Superior, primarily in the Apostle Islands region. Observations are made on the depth habitation of certain species, and some of the fauna are compared to that in some of the other Great Lakes. Also included is a note on the catch of benthic organisms in a...
Authors
Jarl K. Hiltunen

Determination of phosphate in natural waters by activation analysis of tungstophosphoric acid Determination of phosphate in natural waters by activation analysis of tungstophosphoric acid

Activation analysis may be used to determine quantitatively traces of phosphate in natural waters. Methods based on the reaction 31P(n,γ)32P are subject to interference by sulfur and chlorine which give rise to 32P through n,p and n,α reactions. If the ratio of phosphorus to sulfur or chlorine is small, as it is in most natural waters, accurate analyses by these methods are difficult to...
Authors
Herbert E. Allen, Richard B. Hahn

Evaluation of lamprey larvicides in the Big Garlic River and Saux Head Lake Evaluation of lamprey larvicides in the Big Garlic River and Saux Head Lake

Bayluscide (5,2′-dichloro-4′-nitrosalicylanilide) and TFM (3-trifluoromethyl-4-nitrophenol) were evaluated as selective larvicides for control of the sea lamprey, Petromyzon marinus, in the Big Garlic River and Saux Head Lake in Marquette County, Michigan. Population estimates and movement of ammocetes were determined from the recapture of marked ammocetes released before chemical...
Authors
Patrick J. Manion
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