Fish species composition, distribution and abundance trends in the open-coastal waters of northeastern Lake Ontario, 1992–2012

Bottom set gill nets were used to describe and track the fish community in northeastern Lake Ontario from 1992–2012. Six fixed, depth-stratified transects, spread more or less evenly from the mouth of the St. Lawrence River in the Kingston Basin to Brighton in central Lake Ontario, were sampled annu...

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Published in:Aquatic Ecosystem Health & Management
Main Author: Hoyle, J. A.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Michigan State University Press 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14634988.2014.936804
https://scholarlypublishingcollective.org/msup/aehm/article-pdf/18/1/89/1449519/89hoyle.pdf
id crmichiganstupr:10.1080/14634988.2014.936804
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spelling crmichiganstupr:10.1080/14634988.2014.936804 2024-06-09T07:45:12+00:00 Fish species composition, distribution and abundance trends in the open-coastal waters of northeastern Lake Ontario, 1992–2012 Hoyle, J. A. 2015 http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14634988.2014.936804 https://scholarlypublishingcollective.org/msup/aehm/article-pdf/18/1/89/1449519/89hoyle.pdf en eng Michigan State University Press Aquatic Ecosystem Health & Management volume 18, issue 1, page 89-100 ISSN 1463-4988 1539-4077 journal-article 2015 crmichiganstupr https://doi.org/10.1080/14634988.2014.936804 2024-05-16T14:08:24Z Bottom set gill nets were used to describe and track the fish community in northeastern Lake Ontario from 1992–2012. Six fixed, depth-stratified transects, spread more or less evenly from the mouth of the St. Lawrence River in the Kingston Basin to Brighton in central Lake Ontario, were sampled annually during summer. The balanced sampling design provided a broad picture of the warm, cool and coldwater fish community inhabiting open-coastal waters out to about 30 m water depth. Catch results were summarized by geographic area and depth strata to describe species distribution patterns, and presented graphically to illustrate annual abundance trends of the most important fish species (Alewife, Lake Trout, Yellow Perch, Walleye, Round Goby, Lake Whitefish, Brown Trout, Rock Bass, Smallmouth Bass, Chinook Salmon, Burbot, Cisco and Round Whitefish). Many of these dominant species showed peak abundance levels in the early 1990 s followed by decline. Of particular note, members of the coldwater benthic-oriented species assemblage, having all declined dramatically in the 1990s, remain at very low abundance levels, and their future prognosis appears bleak. Article in Journal/Newspaper Burbot Michigan State University Press Brighton ENVELOPE(-55.631,-55.631,49.550,49.550) Lawrence River ENVELOPE(-115.002,-115.002,58.384,58.384) Trout Rock ENVELOPE(-115.236,-115.236,62.550,62.550) Aquatic Ecosystem Health & Management 18 1 89 100
institution Open Polar
collection Michigan State University Press
op_collection_id crmichiganstupr
language English
description Bottom set gill nets were used to describe and track the fish community in northeastern Lake Ontario from 1992–2012. Six fixed, depth-stratified transects, spread more or less evenly from the mouth of the St. Lawrence River in the Kingston Basin to Brighton in central Lake Ontario, were sampled annually during summer. The balanced sampling design provided a broad picture of the warm, cool and coldwater fish community inhabiting open-coastal waters out to about 30 m water depth. Catch results were summarized by geographic area and depth strata to describe species distribution patterns, and presented graphically to illustrate annual abundance trends of the most important fish species (Alewife, Lake Trout, Yellow Perch, Walleye, Round Goby, Lake Whitefish, Brown Trout, Rock Bass, Smallmouth Bass, Chinook Salmon, Burbot, Cisco and Round Whitefish). Many of these dominant species showed peak abundance levels in the early 1990 s followed by decline. Of particular note, members of the coldwater benthic-oriented species assemblage, having all declined dramatically in the 1990s, remain at very low abundance levels, and their future prognosis appears bleak.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Hoyle, J. A.
spellingShingle Hoyle, J. A.
Fish species composition, distribution and abundance trends in the open-coastal waters of northeastern Lake Ontario, 1992–2012
author_facet Hoyle, J. A.
author_sort Hoyle, J. A.
title Fish species composition, distribution and abundance trends in the open-coastal waters of northeastern Lake Ontario, 1992–2012
title_short Fish species composition, distribution and abundance trends in the open-coastal waters of northeastern Lake Ontario, 1992–2012
title_full Fish species composition, distribution and abundance trends in the open-coastal waters of northeastern Lake Ontario, 1992–2012
title_fullStr Fish species composition, distribution and abundance trends in the open-coastal waters of northeastern Lake Ontario, 1992–2012
title_full_unstemmed Fish species composition, distribution and abundance trends in the open-coastal waters of northeastern Lake Ontario, 1992–2012
title_sort fish species composition, distribution and abundance trends in the open-coastal waters of northeastern lake ontario, 1992–2012
publisher Michigan State University Press
publishDate 2015
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14634988.2014.936804
https://scholarlypublishingcollective.org/msup/aehm/article-pdf/18/1/89/1449519/89hoyle.pdf
long_lat ENVELOPE(-55.631,-55.631,49.550,49.550)
ENVELOPE(-115.002,-115.002,58.384,58.384)
ENVELOPE(-115.236,-115.236,62.550,62.550)
geographic Brighton
Lawrence River
Trout Rock
geographic_facet Brighton
Lawrence River
Trout Rock
genre Burbot
genre_facet Burbot
op_source Aquatic Ecosystem Health & Management
volume 18, issue 1, page 89-100
ISSN 1463-4988 1539-4077
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1080/14634988.2014.936804
container_title Aquatic Ecosystem Health & Management
container_volume 18
container_issue 1
container_start_page 89
op_container_end_page 100
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