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Publications

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

Filter Total Items: 2696

Evaluating catchability in a large-scale gillnet survey using hydroacoustics: Making the case for coupled surveys Evaluating catchability in a large-scale gillnet survey using hydroacoustics: Making the case for coupled surveys

Abundance estimates facilitate successful fisheries management. Fisheries agencies often monitor abundance through fishery independent standardized protocols generating relative measures such as catch-per-unit-effort (CPUE), where CPUE is assumed proportional to true abundance. Unfortunately, this assumption is rarely met as fish behavior and environmental conditions influence...
Authors
Mark R. DuFour, Song S. Qian, Christine M Mayer, Christopher Vandergoot

Status and trends of pelagic prey fish in Lake Huron, 2018 Status and trends of pelagic prey fish in Lake Huron, 2018

Scientists from the U.S. Geological Survey’s Great Lakes Science Center conducted integrated acoustic and mid-water trawl surveys of Lake Huron annually from 2004-2018. The 2018 survey was conducted during September and included transects in Lake Huron’s main basin, Georgian Bay, and North Channel. Mean lake-wide pelagic fish density was 1532 fish/ha and mean pelagic fish biomass was...
Authors
Timothy P. O’Brien, Steve A. Farha, David Warner, Peter C. Esselman, Kristy Phillips, Steven Lenart, Chris Olds

Status and trends in the Lake Superior fish community, 2019 Status and trends in the Lake Superior fish community, 2019

The Lake Superior fish community was sampled in 2019 with daytime bottom trawls at 76 nearshore and 35 offshore stations distributed throughout the lake. In the nearshore zone, 25,131 fish from 24 species or morphotypes were collected. The number of species collected at nearshore stations ranged from 0 to 15, with a mean of 5.6 and median of five. Nearshore mean biomass was 5.7 kg/ha...
Authors
Mark R. Vinson, Lori M. Evrard, Owen Gorman, Caroline Lynn Rosinski, Daniel Yule

The effect of sediment cover and female characteristics on the hatching success of walleye The effect of sediment cover and female characteristics on the hatching success of walleye

Natural and anthropogenic sources of sedimentation have the potential to degrade spawning habitat and negatively affect incubating fish embryos. Walleye Sander vitreus are lithophilic broadcast spawners that use specific spawning habitats that are vulnerable to degradation caused by deposition of suspended sediments. We measured the effect of different types of sediment cover on hatching...
Authors
Alex Gatch, S.K. Koenigbauer, Edward F. Roseman, T. Hook

Potential changes to the biology and challenges to the management of invasive sea lamprey Petromyzon marinus in the Laurentian Great Lakes due to climate change Potential changes to the biology and challenges to the management of invasive sea lamprey Petromyzon marinus in the Laurentian Great Lakes due to climate change

Control programs are implemented to mitigate the damage caused by invasive species worldwide. In the highly invaded Great Lakes, the climate is expected to become warmer with more extreme weather and variable precipitation, resulting in shorter iced‐over periods and variable tributary flows as well as changes to pH and river hydrology and hydrogeomorphology. We review how climate change...
Authors
Robert J. Lennox, Gale A. Bravener, Hsien-Yung Lin, Charles P. Madenjian, Andrew M. Muir, Christina K. Remucal, Kelly F. Robinson, Andrew M. Rous, Michael J. Siefkes, Michael P. Wilkie, Daniel P. Zielinski, Steven J. Cooke

Sequence analysis and acoustic tracking individual lake sturgeon identifies multiple patterns of river-lake habitat use Sequence analysis and acoustic tracking individual lake sturgeon identifies multiple patterns of river-lake habitat use

Understanding the spatial ecology of sturgeon (Acipenseridae) has proven to be a challenge due to the life history characteristics of these fish, especially their long life span, intermittent spawning, and long‐distance migrations. Within the Huron‐Erie Corridor (HEC) of the Laurentian Great Lakes, habitat use of 247 lake sturgeon (Acipenser fulvescens ) was monitored over a three‐year...
Authors
Scott F. Colborne, Darryl W. Hondorp, Christopher M. Holbrook, Michael R. Lowe, James C. Boase, Justin A. Chiotti, Todd C. Wills, Edward F. Roseman, Charles C. Krueger

Environmental and biological factors influence migratory Sea Lamprey catchability: Implications for tracking abundance in the Laurentian Great Lakes Environmental and biological factors influence migratory Sea Lamprey catchability: Implications for tracking abundance in the Laurentian Great Lakes

Sea Lamprey Petromyzon marinus population trends in the Great Lakes are tracked by trapping migratory adults in tributaries and using mark and recapture techniques to estimate abundance. Understanding what environmental and biological factors influence Sea Lamprey capture in tributaries is crucial to developing efficient trapping methods and reliable abundance estimates. We analyzed data...
Authors
Sean A. Lewandoski, Gale A Bravener, Peter J. Hrodey, Scott M. Miehls

Preliminary status of Lake Ontario Alewife based on the 2019 spring trawl survey Preliminary status of Lake Ontario Alewife based on the 2019 spring trawl survey

-The 2019 spring prey fish trawl survey was the most extensive fish survey ever conducted on Lake Ontario with 252 bottom trawls collecting 214,569 fish from 39 species, in main-lake and embayment habitats, at depths ranging from 5 to 225 meters (16.5 – 742.5 feet). -Alewife distribution was similar in U.S. (southern) and Canadian (northern) portions of the lake, which differs from the...
Authors
Brian Weidel, Jeremy P. Holden, Michael J. Connerton

Characteristics for the external identification of Black Carp from Grass Carp Characteristics for the external identification of Black Carp from Grass Carp

Black Carp Mylopharyngodon piceus and Grass Carp Ctenopharyngodon idella are morphologically similar species native to eastern Asia and imported to North America as biological control organisms. Preferred identification methods are coloration and pharyngeal tooth form. Grass Carp possess serrated teeth and Black Carp molariform teeth. Examination of pharyngeal teeth causes extensive...
Authors
Patrick Kroboth, Duane Chapman, Robert A. Hrabik, D.A. Neely

The future of barriers and trapping methods in the sea lamprey (Petromyzon marinus) control program in the Laurentian Great Lakes The future of barriers and trapping methods in the sea lamprey (Petromyzon marinus) control program in the Laurentian Great Lakes

A major duty of the Great Lakes Fishery Commission (GLFC), created in 1955, was the development a program of eradication or management of sea lamprey populations in the Great Lakes for the protection of the Great Lakes fishery. Beginning in the 1980s the GLFC shifted sea lamprey control to an integrated pest management model seeking to deploy control measures which target multiple life...
Authors
Scott M. Miehls, Paul Sullivan, Michael Twohey, Jessica Barber, Rodney McDonald

Evaluation of potential sources of sauger Sander canadensis for reintroduction into Lake Erie Evaluation of potential sources of sauger Sander canadensis for reintroduction into Lake Erie

Sauger (Sander canadensis) supported recreational and commercial fisheries in Lake Erie until the fishery collapsed in the early-1950s, with extirpation of sauger occurring soon after. Previous attempts to rebuild populations via stocking programs were unsuccessful, and the reasons for lack of success are unclear. The Ohio Department of Natural Resources-Division of Wildlife is re...
Authors
Travis Hartman, Jeff Tyson, Kevin Page, Wendylee Stott

A conceptual framework for the identification and characterization of lacustrine spawning habitats for native lake charr Salvelinus namaycush A conceptual framework for the identification and characterization of lacustrine spawning habitats for native lake charr Salvelinus namaycush

Lake charr Salvelinus namaycush are endemic to the formerly glaciated regions of North America and spawn primarily in lakes, unlike most other Salmoninae. Spawning habitats for lake charr are thought to be characterized by relatively large substrate particle sizes which provide sufficient interstitial spaces for egg incubation, but little is known about the physical processes that create...
Authors
Stephen Riley, J. E. Marsden, M. S. Ridgway, Christopher Konrad, Steve A. Farha, Thomas R. Binder, Trevor A. Middel, Peter C. Esselman, Charles C. Krueger
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