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Status and trends in the fish community of Lake Superior, 2012 Status and trends in the fish community of Lake Superior, 2012

The Great Lakes Science Center has conducted daytime nearshore bottom trawl surveys of Lake Superior (15-80 m bathymetric depth zone) each spring since 1978 and an offshore survey (>80 m) since 2011 to provide long-term trends of relative abundance and biomass of the fish community. In 2012, 72 nearshore and 34 offshore stations were sampled with a 12-m Yankee bottom trawl. The 2012...
Authors
Owen T. Gorman, Lori M. Evrard, Gary A. Cholwek, Mark Vinson

Nearshore hydrodynamics as loading and forcing factors for Escherichia coli contamination at an embayed beach Nearshore hydrodynamics as loading and forcing factors for Escherichia coli contamination at an embayed beach

Numerical simulations of the transport and fate of Escherichia coli were conducted at Chicago's 63rd Street Beach, an embayed beach that had the highest mean E. coli concentration among 23 similar Lake Michigan beaches during summer months of 2000-2005, in order to find the cause for the high bacterial contamination. The numerical model was based on the transport of E. coli by current...
Authors
Zhongfu Ge, Richard L. Whitman, Meredith B. Nevers, Mantha S. Phanikumar, Muruleedhara N. Byappanahalli

Bibliography of Dreissena polymorpha (zebra mussels) and Dreissena rostriformis Bugensis (QUAGGA mussels): 1989 to 2011 Bibliography of Dreissena polymorpha (zebra mussels) and Dreissena rostriformis Bugensis (QUAGGA mussels): 1989 to 2011

Dreissenid mussels invaded and colonized waters of the Laurentian Great Lakes during the late 1980s. Their colonization and resulting impact have been characterized as one of the most important ecological changes in freshwater systems in North America. The need for information on dreissenid mussels has grown during the past 2 decades, which has prompted the compilation of this...
Authors
Don W. Schloesser, Christine Schmuckal

Exploring life history characteristics of naturalized versus stocked chinook Exploring life history characteristics of naturalized versus stocked chinook

Naturalization of stocked populations can result in divergence of life-history traits from domestic stocks. Lake Michigan supports popular Chinook (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) Salmon fisheries that have been sustained by stocking since the late 1960s. Natural recruitment of Chinook Salmon in Lake Michigan has increased in the last few decades and currently contributes over 50% of Chinook...
Authors
Mark W. Rogers, Janice A Kerns, David B. Bunnell, Randall M. Claramunt, Paris D. Collingsworth

Construction of shipping channels in the Detroit River: History and environmental consequences Construction of shipping channels in the Detroit River: History and environmental consequences

The Detroit River is one of the most biologically diverse areas in the Great Lakes basin. It has been an important international shipping route since the 1820s and is one of the busiest navigation centers in the United States. Historically, it supported one of the most profitable Lake Whitefish (Coregonus clupeaformis) commercial fisheries in the Great Lakes. Since 1874, the lower...
Authors
David H. Bennion, Bruce A. Manny

How systematic age underestimation can impede understanding of fish population dynamics: Lessons learned from a Lake Superior cisco stock How systematic age underestimation can impede understanding of fish population dynamics: Lessons learned from a Lake Superior cisco stock

Systematic underestimation of fish age can impede understanding of recruitment variability and adaptive strategies (like longevity) and can bias estimates of survivorship. We suspected that previous estimates of annual survival (S; range = 0.20-0.44) for Lake Superior ciscoes Coregonus artedi developed from scale ages were biased low. To test this hypothesis, we estimated the total...
Authors
Daniel L. Yule, Jason D. Stockwell, J.A. Black, Ken I. Cullis, Gary A. Cholwek, Jared T. Myers

Physical and biological factors influencing environmental sources of fecal indicator bacteria in surface water Physical and biological factors influencing environmental sources of fecal indicator bacteria in surface water

This paper describes the environmental populations of faecal indicator bacteria, and the processes by which these populations become nonpoint sources and influence nearshore water quality. The different possible sources of these indicator bacteria are presented. These include groundwater, springs and seeps, aquatic sediments, beach sand, birds, Cladophora and plant wrack. Also discussed...
Authors
Richard L. Whitman, Meredith B. Nevers, Katarzyna Przybyla-Kelly, Muruleedhara N. Byappanahalli

Short-term effects of burn season on flowering phenology of savanna plants Short-term effects of burn season on flowering phenology of savanna plants

We examined the effect of season of burn on flowering phenology of groundlayer species, in the year following burns, in a mesic-sand Midwestern oak savanna. Burn treatments were fall, early-season, growing-season, late-season, and 1 or 5 years after a prior early-season wildfire. For these treatments, we compared the number of flowering stems and of flowers for species overall, for the...
Authors
N.B. Pavlovic, S. A. Leicht-Young, R. Grundel

Distribution of lake sturgeon in New York: 11 years of restoration management Distribution of lake sturgeon in New York: 11 years of restoration management

Lake sturgeon (Acipenser fulvescens) are native within the Lake Ontario drainage basin and listed as threatened by New York State. In 1995 the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (NYSDEC) initiated restoration management of lake sturgeon. This management included both protection of extant populations and stocking of uninhabited historic waters with juvenile sturgeon...
Authors
Marc Chalupnicki, Dawn E. Dittman, D.M. Carlson

Thiamine concentrations in lake whitefish eggs from the upper Great Lakes are related to maternal diet Thiamine concentrations in lake whitefish eggs from the upper Great Lakes are related to maternal diet

Thiamine deficiency is responsible for reproductive impairment in several species of salmonines in the Great lakes, and is thought to be caused by the consumption of prey containing thiaminase, a thiamine-degrading enzyme. Because thiaminase levels are extremely high in dreissenid mussels, fish that prey on them may be susceptible to thiamine deficiency. We determined thiamine...
Authors
Stephen Riley, J. Rinchard, M.P. Ebener, Donald E. Tillitt, K.R. Munkittrick, J.L. Parrott, J.D. Allen

Adaption of egg and larvae sampling techniques for lake sturgeon and broadcast spawning fishes in a deep river Adaption of egg and larvae sampling techniques for lake sturgeon and broadcast spawning fishes in a deep river

In this report we describe how we adapted two techniques for sampling lake sturgeon (Acipenser fulvescens) and other fish early life history stages to meet our research needs in the Detroit River, a deep, flowing Great Lakes connecting channel. First, we developed a buoy‐less method for sampling fish eggs and spawning activity using egg mats deployed on the river bottom. The buoy‐less...
Authors
Edward F. Roseman, James Boase, Gregory W. Kennedy, Jaquelyn M. Craig, Karen Soper
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