Potential reintroduction of Arctic grayling, Thymallus arcticus, into the West Branch of the Maple River: An assessment of abiotic factors, salmonid diet and community

Biology and Ecology of Fishes Arctic grayling were once abundant species in northern Michigan that have since been extirpated. Logging, destruction of habitat, overfishing, and introduction of non-native trout species contributed to the decline of the gray ling population in Michigan. Habitat restor...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: McGill, Luke
Other Authors: Schrank, Amy, Ann Arbor
Format: Report
Language:unknown
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/147903
id ftumdeepblue:oai:deepblue.lib.umich.edu:2027.42/147903
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spelling ftumdeepblue:oai:deepblue.lib.umich.edu:2027.42/147903 2023-08-20T04:03:19+02:00 Potential reintroduction of Arctic grayling, Thymallus arcticus, into the West Branch of the Maple River: An assessment of abiotic factors, salmonid diet and community McGill, Luke Schrank, Amy Ann Arbor Maple RIver 2018 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/147903 unknown https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/147903 Natural Resources and Environment Science Working Paper 2018 ftumdeepblue 2023-07-31T20:42:11Z Biology and Ecology of Fishes Arctic grayling were once abundant species in northern Michigan that have since been extirpated. Logging, destruction of habitat, overfishing, and introduction of non-native trout species contributed to the decline of the gray ling population in Michigan. Habitat restoration and a recent resurgence of interest and funding for reintroduction of gray ling has led many groups to investigate rivers in Michigan for grayling suitability. In this study, we investigated the west branch of the Maple River, located in Emmet County, Michigan, as a potential site for reintroduction of gray ling. Our study consisted of habitat assessment, macro invertebrate community study, and fish community study. We found that the west branch of the Maple River is a high quality cold-water river with suitable substrate for grayling. Additionally, there are abundant macroinvertebrate prey items for grayling. Grayling would be able to coexist with other fish species such as Brook trout, Salvelinus fontinalis, in some upstream areas due to the to low abundance competitor trout like Brown trout, Salmo trutta, and Rainbow trout, Oncorhynchus mykiss. More studies must be done on other sites, but we have concluded that the reintroduction of grayling into the west branch of the Maple River would be an achievable effort. https://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/147903/1/McGill_2018_1.pdf Report Arctic grayling Arctic Thymallus arcticus University of Michigan: Deep Blue Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection University of Michigan: Deep Blue
op_collection_id ftumdeepblue
language unknown
topic Natural Resources and Environment
Science
spellingShingle Natural Resources and Environment
Science
McGill, Luke
Potential reintroduction of Arctic grayling, Thymallus arcticus, into the West Branch of the Maple River: An assessment of abiotic factors, salmonid diet and community
topic_facet Natural Resources and Environment
Science
description Biology and Ecology of Fishes Arctic grayling were once abundant species in northern Michigan that have since been extirpated. Logging, destruction of habitat, overfishing, and introduction of non-native trout species contributed to the decline of the gray ling population in Michigan. Habitat restoration and a recent resurgence of interest and funding for reintroduction of gray ling has led many groups to investigate rivers in Michigan for grayling suitability. In this study, we investigated the west branch of the Maple River, located in Emmet County, Michigan, as a potential site for reintroduction of gray ling. Our study consisted of habitat assessment, macro invertebrate community study, and fish community study. We found that the west branch of the Maple River is a high quality cold-water river with suitable substrate for grayling. Additionally, there are abundant macroinvertebrate prey items for grayling. Grayling would be able to coexist with other fish species such as Brook trout, Salvelinus fontinalis, in some upstream areas due to the to low abundance competitor trout like Brown trout, Salmo trutta, and Rainbow trout, Oncorhynchus mykiss. More studies must be done on other sites, but we have concluded that the reintroduction of grayling into the west branch of the Maple River would be an achievable effort. https://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/147903/1/McGill_2018_1.pdf
author2 Schrank, Amy
Ann Arbor
format Report
author McGill, Luke
author_facet McGill, Luke
author_sort McGill, Luke
title Potential reintroduction of Arctic grayling, Thymallus arcticus, into the West Branch of the Maple River: An assessment of abiotic factors, salmonid diet and community
title_short Potential reintroduction of Arctic grayling, Thymallus arcticus, into the West Branch of the Maple River: An assessment of abiotic factors, salmonid diet and community
title_full Potential reintroduction of Arctic grayling, Thymallus arcticus, into the West Branch of the Maple River: An assessment of abiotic factors, salmonid diet and community
title_fullStr Potential reintroduction of Arctic grayling, Thymallus arcticus, into the West Branch of the Maple River: An assessment of abiotic factors, salmonid diet and community
title_full_unstemmed Potential reintroduction of Arctic grayling, Thymallus arcticus, into the West Branch of the Maple River: An assessment of abiotic factors, salmonid diet and community
title_sort potential reintroduction of arctic grayling, thymallus arcticus, into the west branch of the maple river: an assessment of abiotic factors, salmonid diet and community
publishDate 2018
url https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/147903
op_coverage Maple RIver
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic grayling
Arctic
Thymallus arcticus
genre_facet Arctic grayling
Arctic
Thymallus arcticus
op_relation https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/147903
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