Publications
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Assessing the bioaccumulation of contaminants from sediments by fish and other aquatic organisms Assessing the bioaccumulation of contaminants from sediments by fish and other aquatic organisms
Contaminated sediments that are not acutely toxic to aquatic organisms but contain bioaccumulable toxic substances present a common, yet poorly understood problem for regulatory decision makers. In order to recommend options to minimize bioaccumulation of these toxic substances, decisionmakers need estimates of 1. which substances are available for accumulation by aquatic organisms; and...
Authors
Wayne A. Willford, Michael J. Mac, Robert J. Hesselberg
Horizontal ichthyoplankton tow-net system with unobstructed net opening Horizontal ichthyoplankton tow-net system with unobstructed net opening
The larval fish sampler described here consists of a modified bridle, frame, and net system with an obstruction-free net opening and is small enough for use on boats 10 m or less in length. The tow net features a square net frame attached to a 0.5-m-diameter cylinder-on-cone plankton net with a bridle designed to eliminate all obstructions forward of the net opening, significantly...
Authors
Robert T. Nester
Lake Superior revisited 1984 Lake Superior revisited 1984
The Lake Superior fish community has changed substantially since the early 1960s, when control of the sea lamprey (Petromyzon marinus) became effective. Self-reproducing stocks of lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) have been reestablished in many inshore areas, although they have not yet reached pre-sea lamprey abundance; offshore lake trout are probably at or near pre-sea lamprey...
Authors
Wayne R. MacCallum, James H. Selgeby
Predicting Great Lakes fish yields: tools and constraints Predicting Great Lakes fish yields: tools and constraints
Prediction of yield is a critical component of fisheries management. The development of sound yield prediction methodology and the application of the results of yield prediction are central to the evolution of strategies to achieve stated goals for Great Lakes fisheries and to the measurement of progress toward those goals. Despite general availability of species yield models, yield...
Authors
C.A. Lewis, D.H. Schupp, W.W. Taylor, J.J. Collins, Richard W. Hatch
Prey fish dynamics and salmonine predator growth in Lake Ontario, 1978-84 Prey fish dynamics and salmonine predator growth in Lake Ontario, 1978-84
The size of hatchery-reared brown trout (Salmo trutta) and coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch), 1 yr after release in Lake Ontario, declined when the stocking of salmonines was increased between 1978 and 1984. The principal prey species, alewife (Alosa pseudoharengus) and rainbow smelt (Osmerus mordax), failed to show the expected, predator-induced downturn in abundance. Instead, rainbow...
Authors
Robert O’Gorman, Roger A. Bergstedt, Thomas H. Eckert
Yield and dynamics of destabilized chub (Coregonus spp.) populations in Lakes Michigan and Huron, 1950-84 Yield and dynamics of destabilized chub (Coregonus spp.) populations in Lakes Michigan and Huron, 1950-84
Deepwater ciscoes (Coregonus spp.) or 'chubs' of Lake Michigan far surpassed those of Lake Huron in yield, population density, and resilience following severe depletion in the 1960s and 1970s, when the bloater (C. hoyi) composed more than 90% of the stocks. The population decline of bloaters in recent decades was mainly attributed to exploitation, to the depression of chub recruitment (e...
Authors
Edward H. Brown, Ray L. Argyle, N. Robert Payne, Mark E. Holey
Meeting future information needs for Great Lakes fisheries management Meeting future information needs for Great Lakes fisheries management
Description of information needs for management of Great Lakes fisheries is complicated by recent changes in biology and management of the Great Lakes, development of new analytical methodologies, and a transition in management from a traditional unispecies approach to a multispecies/community approach. A number of general problems with the collection and management of data and...
Authors
W.J. Christie, John J. Collins, Gary W. Eck, Chris I. Goddard, John M. Hoenig, Mark Holey, Lawrence D. Jacobson, Wayne MacCallum, Stephen J. Nepszy, Robert O’Gorman, James Selgeby
Thermal and dissolved oxygen characteristics of a South Carolina cooling reservoir Thermal and dissolved oxygen characteristics of a South Carolina cooling reservoir
Temperature and dissolved oxygen concentrations were measured monthly from January 1971 to December 1982 at 1-m depth intervals at 13 stations in Keowee Reservoir in order to characterize spatial and temporal changes associated with operation of the Oconee Nuclear Station. The reservoir water column was i to 4°C warmer in operational than in non-operational years. The thermo-dine was at...
Authors
James L. Oliver, Patrick L. Hudson
Discrepancies between ages determined from scales and otoliths for alewives from the Great Lakes Discrepancies between ages determined from scales and otoliths for alewives from the Great Lakes
Discrepancies between ages determined from otoliths and those determined from scales were common and, sometimes, quite large in alewives Alosa pseudoharengus collected in fall 1983 from Lakes Ontario, Huron, and Michigan. Among fish with 'otolith ages' of 4 or more, the percentages having identical 'scale ages' were 1% in Lake Ontario, 35% in Lake Huron, and 56% in Lake Michigan. Among...
Authors
Robert O’Gorman, D. Hugh Barwick, Charles A. Bowen
Seasonal bathythermal distribution of juvenile lake trout in Lake Ontario Seasonal bathythermal distribution of juvenile lake trout in Lake Ontario
Bathythermal distributions of hatchery-reared lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) of three genetic strains (Lake Superior; Clearwater Lake, Manitoba; and Seneca Lake, New York) were described from catches with bottom trawls in Lake Ontario during April-May, June, July-August, and October, 1978–1984. This work was part of a program to evaluate post-stocking performance of hatchery-reared...
Authors
Joseph H. Elrod, Clifford P. Schneider
Dispersal of three strains of hatchery-reared lake trout in Lake Ontario Dispersal of three strains of hatchery-reared lake trout in Lake Ontario
Rates of dispersal and resultant geographical distributions were determined for three strains of hatchery-reared lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) stocked at six sites in U.S. waters of Lake Ontario. The strains were Lake Superior (SUP); Clearwater Lake, Manitoba (CWL); and Seneca Lake, New York (SEN). The fish were recovered with bottom trawls fished during July and August 1980–1985 at...
Authors
Joseph H. Elrod
Evaluation of coded wire tags for marking lake trout Evaluation of coded wire tags for marking lake trout
Among hatchery-reared lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) of the 1979-1982 year classes stocked in New York waters of Lake Ontario, more than 3 million fish were marked with a coded wire tag (CWT) plus an adipose fin clip, and 1.5 million with only conventional fin clips. Altogether, 7,640 tags were recovered from fish collected with bottom trawls and gill nets or caught by anglers during...
Authors
Joseph H. Elrod, Clifford P. Schneider