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Publications

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

Filter Total Items: 2678

A spatial classification and database for management, research, and policy making: The Great Lakes aquatic habitat framework A spatial classification and database for management, research, and policy making: The Great Lakes aquatic habitat framework

Managing the world's largest and most complex freshwater ecosystem, the Laurentian Great Lakes, requires a spatially hierarchical basin-wide database of ecological and socioeconomic information that is comparable across the region. To meet such a need, we developed a spatial classification framework and database — Great Lakes Aquatic Habitat Framework (GLAHF). GLAHF consists of...
Authors
Lizhu Wang, Catherine M. Riseng, Lacey Mason, Kevin Werhrly, Edward Rutherford, James E. McKenna, Chris Castiglione, Lucinda B. Johnson, Dana M. Infante, Scott P. Sowa, Mike Robertson, Jeff Schaeffer, Mary Khoury, John Gaiot, Tom Hollenhurst, Colin N. Brooks, Mark Coscarelli

Efficacy of an extract from garlic, Allium sativum, against infection with the furunculosis bacterium, Aeromonas salmonicida, in rainbow trout, Oncorhynchus mykiss Efficacy of an extract from garlic, Allium sativum, against infection with the furunculosis bacterium, Aeromonas salmonicida, in rainbow trout, Oncorhynchus mykiss

Juvenile rainbow trout, Oncorhynchus mykiss, were fed diets containing 0, 0.5, 1.0, and 2.0% of a garlic extract, challenged with a modified 50% lethal dose of Aeromonas salmonicida and monitored for 28 d. There were significant increases in survival of trout fed 0.5 and 1.0% garlic extract as compared to the control and 2.0% garlic extract groups. A target animal safety study was...
Authors
Kate E. Breyer, Rodman G. Getchell, Emily R. Cornwell, Gregory A. Wooster, H. George Ketola, Paul R. Bowser

Potential effects of climate change on the growth of fishes from different thermal guilds in Lakes Michigan and Huron Potential effects of climate change on the growth of fishes from different thermal guilds in Lakes Michigan and Huron

We used a bioenergetics modeling approach to investigate potential effects of climate change on the growth of two economically important native fishes: yellow perch (Perca flavescens), a cool-water fish, and lake whitefish (Coregonus clupeaformis), a cold-water fish, in deep and oligotrophic Lakes Michigan and Huron. For assessing potential changes in fish growth, we contrasted simulated...
Authors
Yu-Chun Kao, Charles P. Madenjian, David B. Bunnell, Brent M. Lofgren, Marjorie Perroud

Natural trophic variability in a large, oligotrophic, near-pristine lake Natural trophic variability in a large, oligotrophic, near-pristine lake

Conclusions drawn from stable isotope data can be limited by an incomplete understanding of natural isotopic variability over time and space. We quantified spatial and temporal variability in fish carbon and nitrogen stable isotopes in Lake Hövsgöl, Mongolia, a large, remote, oligotrophic lake with an unusually species-poor fish community. The fish community demonstrated a high degree of...
Authors
Talia Young, Olaf P. Jensen, Brian Weidel, Sudeep Chandra

Dynamic hypoxic zones in Lake Erie compress fish habitat, altering vulnerability to fishing gears Dynamic hypoxic zones in Lake Erie compress fish habitat, altering vulnerability to fishing gears

Seasonal degradation of aquatic habitats from hypoxia occurs in numerous freshwater and coastal marine systems and can result in direct mortality or displacement of fish. Yet, fishery landings from these systems are frequently unresponsive to changes in the severity and extent of hypoxia, and population-scale effects have been difficult to measure except in extreme hypoxic conditions...
Authors
Richard T. Kraus, Carey T. Knight, Troy M. Farmer, Ann Marie Gorman, Paris D. Collingsworth, Glenn J. Warren, Patrick M. Kocovsky, Joseph D. Conroy

A pheromone outweighs temperature in influencing migration of sea lamprey A pheromone outweighs temperature in influencing migration of sea lamprey

Organisms continuously acquire and process information from surrounding cues. While some cues complement one another in delivering more reliable information, others may provide conflicting information. How organisms extract and use reliable information from a multitude of cues is largely unknown. We examined movement decisions of sea lampreys (Petromyzon marinus L.) exposed to a...
Authors
Cory O. Brant, Ke Li, Nicholas S. Johnson, Weiming Li

Fine-scale pathways used by adult sea lampreys during riverine spawning migrations Fine-scale pathways used by adult sea lampreys during riverine spawning migrations

Better knowledge of upstream migratory patterns of spawning Sea Lampreys Petromyzon marinus, an invasive species in the Great Lakes, is needed to improve trapping for population control and assessment. Although trapping of adult Sea Lampreys provides the basis for estimates of lake-wide abundance that are used to evaluate the Sea Lamprey control program, traps have only been operated at...
Authors
Christopher Holbrook, Roger A. Bergstedt, Noah S. Adams, Tyson Hatton, Robert L. McLaughlin

A sea lamprey (Petromyzon marinus) sex pheromone mixture increases trap catch relative to a single synthesized component in specific environments A sea lamprey (Petromyzon marinus) sex pheromone mixture increases trap catch relative to a single synthesized component in specific environments

Spermiating male sea lamprey (Petromyzon marinus) release a sex pheromone, of which a component, 7α, 12α, 24-trihydoxy-3-one-5α-cholan-24-sulfate (3kPZS), has been identified and shown to induce long distance preference responses in ovulated females. However, other pheromone components exist, and when 3kPZS alone was used to control invasive sea lamprey populations in the Laurentian...
Authors
Nicholas S. Johnson, John A. Tix, Benjamin L. Hlina, C. Michael Wagner, Michael J. Siefkes, Huiyong Wang, Weiming Li

Landscape prediction and mapping of game fish biomass, an ecosystem service of Michigan rivers Landscape prediction and mapping of game fish biomass, an ecosystem service of Michigan rivers

The increased integration of ecosystem service concepts into natural resource management places renewed emphasis on prediction and mapping of fish biomass as a major provisioning service of rivers. The goals of this study were to predict and map patterns of fish biomass as a proxy for the availability of catchable fish for anglers in rivers and to identify the strongest landscape...
Authors
Peter C. Esselman, R. Jan Stevenson, Frank Lupi, Catherine M. Riseng, Michael J. Wiley

Summer diel diet and feeding periodicity of four species of cyprinids in the Salmon River, New York Summer diel diet and feeding periodicity of four species of cyprinids in the Salmon River, New York

The diel diet composition and feeding periodicity of Luxilus cornutus (common shiner), Exoglossum maxillingua (cutlip minnow), Semotilus corporalis (fallfish), and Notropis hudsonius (spottail shiner) were examined in the Salmon River, New York over a 24 h period during the summer. Chironomids were the major prey of common shiner (60.6%) and cutlip minnow (54.7%), whereas terrestrial...
Authors
James H. Johnson

Females exceed males in mercury concentrations of burbot Lota lota Females exceed males in mercury concentrations of burbot Lota lota

Examination of differences in contaminant concentrations between sexes of fish, across several fish species, may reveal clues for important behavioral and physiological differences between the sexes. We determined whole-fish total mercury (Hg) concentrations of 25 male and 25 female adult burbot Lota lota captured in Lake Erie during summer 2011, and of 14 male and 18 female adult burbot...
Authors
Charles P. Madenjian, Martin A. Stapanian, Peter A. Cott, David P. Krabbenhoft, William Edwards, Lynn M. Ogilvie, Justin G. Mychek-Londer, John F. DeWild

Wetland habitat disturbance best predicts metrics of an amphibian index of biotic integrity Wetland habitat disturbance best predicts metrics of an amphibian index of biotic integrity

Regression and classification trees were used to identify the best predictors of the five component metrics of the Ohio Amphibian Index of Biotic Integrity (AmphIBI) in 54 wetlands in Ohio, USA. Of the 17 wetland- and surrounding landscape-scale variables considered, the best predictor for all AmphIBI metrics was habitat alteration and development within the wetland. The results were...
Authors
Martin A. Stapanian, Mick Micacchion, Jean V. Adams
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