Fish utilization of Great Lakes coastal wetlands

Correspondence analysis was used to partition fish species associated with the open water of each of the five Great Lakes and nine coastal wetlands for which data were available. Included in the analysis were 113 species in 25 families. Three species complexes were suggested: a Great Lakes taxocene...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jude, David J., Pappas, Janice L.
Other Authors: Center for Great Lakes and Aquatic Sciences, Ann Arbor
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 1992
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/83690
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spelling ftumdeepblue:oai:deepblue.lib.umich.edu:2027.42/83690 2023-08-20T04:05:41+02:00 Fish utilization of Great Lakes coastal wetlands Jude, David J. Pappas, Janice L. Center for Great Lakes and Aquatic Sciences Ann Arbor 1992 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/83690 en_US eng https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/83690 Journal of Great Lakes Research Correspondence Analysis Spawning Marshes Fish Species Complexes Science (General) Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Science Article 1992 ftumdeepblue 2023-07-31T21:15:38Z Correspondence analysis was used to partition fish species associated with the open water of each of the five Great Lakes and nine coastal wetlands for which data were available. Included in the analysis were 113 species in 25 families. Three species complexes were suggested: a Great Lakes taxocene (31 species); a transitional community which utilized open water, nearshore, and wetlands (35 species); and a wetlands taxocene, comprised of 47 species found to be closely associated with coastal wetlands. The wetland species split into two main groups: permanent residents (e.g., brown bullhead Ictalurus nebulosus, mudminnow Umbra lima, longnose gar Lepisosteus osseus) and migratory species. Migratory species included three subgroups: (1) those that spawned in the wetlands and then left (e.g., northern pike Esox lucius, common carp Cyprinus carpio, white sucker Catostomus commersoni, walleye Stizostedion vitreum), (2) those that used the wetlands as a nursery area (e.g., northern pike, gizzard shad Dorosoma cepedianum, spottail shiner Notropis hudsonius), and (3) those that migrated into the wetland from other wetlands or a Great Lake for shelter, spawning sites, or food; as part of the sustaining process of dispersal of young; or as part of wandering behavior (e.g., burbot Lota lota, rainbow smelt Osmerus mordax, rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss). It was found that most remaining coastal wetlands are degraded or altered to some degree, and are dominated by a characteristic silt- and turbidity-tolerant fish fauna (e.g., common carp, gizzard shad, goldfish Carassius auratus, and brown bullhead). Nevertheless, even degraded wetlands still functioned as important fish habitat by exporting large quantities offish, first to avian, piscine, and mammalian food chains through predation, and second to the Great Lakes as young-of-the-year sport and forage fish. The research implies that a wetland must maintain a connection with a Great Lake to promote and enhance efficient fish utilization of the high productivity of marshes; ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Burbot Lota lota lota University of Michigan: Deep Blue Gar’ ENVELOPE(162.014,162.014,57.140,57.140)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Michigan: Deep Blue
op_collection_id ftumdeepblue
language English
topic Correspondence Analysis
Spawning
Marshes
Fish Species Complexes
Science (General)
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
Science
spellingShingle Correspondence Analysis
Spawning
Marshes
Fish Species Complexes
Science (General)
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
Science
Jude, David J.
Pappas, Janice L.
Fish utilization of Great Lakes coastal wetlands
topic_facet Correspondence Analysis
Spawning
Marshes
Fish Species Complexes
Science (General)
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
Science
description Correspondence analysis was used to partition fish species associated with the open water of each of the five Great Lakes and nine coastal wetlands for which data were available. Included in the analysis were 113 species in 25 families. Three species complexes were suggested: a Great Lakes taxocene (31 species); a transitional community which utilized open water, nearshore, and wetlands (35 species); and a wetlands taxocene, comprised of 47 species found to be closely associated with coastal wetlands. The wetland species split into two main groups: permanent residents (e.g., brown bullhead Ictalurus nebulosus, mudminnow Umbra lima, longnose gar Lepisosteus osseus) and migratory species. Migratory species included three subgroups: (1) those that spawned in the wetlands and then left (e.g., northern pike Esox lucius, common carp Cyprinus carpio, white sucker Catostomus commersoni, walleye Stizostedion vitreum), (2) those that used the wetlands as a nursery area (e.g., northern pike, gizzard shad Dorosoma cepedianum, spottail shiner Notropis hudsonius), and (3) those that migrated into the wetland from other wetlands or a Great Lake for shelter, spawning sites, or food; as part of the sustaining process of dispersal of young; or as part of wandering behavior (e.g., burbot Lota lota, rainbow smelt Osmerus mordax, rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss). It was found that most remaining coastal wetlands are degraded or altered to some degree, and are dominated by a characteristic silt- and turbidity-tolerant fish fauna (e.g., common carp, gizzard shad, goldfish Carassius auratus, and brown bullhead). Nevertheless, even degraded wetlands still functioned as important fish habitat by exporting large quantities offish, first to avian, piscine, and mammalian food chains through predation, and second to the Great Lakes as young-of-the-year sport and forage fish. The research implies that a wetland must maintain a connection with a Great Lake to promote and enhance efficient fish utilization of the high productivity of marshes; ...
author2 Center for Great Lakes and Aquatic Sciences
Ann Arbor
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Jude, David J.
Pappas, Janice L.
author_facet Jude, David J.
Pappas, Janice L.
author_sort Jude, David J.
title Fish utilization of Great Lakes coastal wetlands
title_short Fish utilization of Great Lakes coastal wetlands
title_full Fish utilization of Great Lakes coastal wetlands
title_fullStr Fish utilization of Great Lakes coastal wetlands
title_full_unstemmed Fish utilization of Great Lakes coastal wetlands
title_sort fish utilization of great lakes coastal wetlands
publishDate 1992
url https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/83690
long_lat ENVELOPE(162.014,162.014,57.140,57.140)
geographic Gar’
geographic_facet Gar’
genre Burbot
Lota lota
lota
genre_facet Burbot
Lota lota
lota
op_relation https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/83690
Journal of Great Lakes Research
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