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Bronte, C.R., L.M. Evrard, W.P. Brown, K.R. Mayo, and A.J. Edwards, 1998. Fish
Community Changes in the St. Louis River, Lake Superior, 1989-1996: Is it Ruffe or
Population Dynamics?, US Geological Survey.
Reprinted from Journal of Great Lakes Research (1998) 24(2):
309-318
Fish Community Changes in the St. Louis River,
Lake Superior, 1989-1996: Is it Ruffe or Population Dynamics?
Abstract
Ruffe (Gymnocephalus cernuus) have been implicated in density declines of native
species through egg predation and competition for food in some European waters where they
were introduced. Density estimates for ruffe and principal native fishes in the St. Louis
River estuary (western Lake Superior) were developed for 1989 to 1996 to measure changes
in the fish community in response to an unintentional introduction of ruffe. During the
study, ruffe density increased and the densities of several native species decreased. The
reductions of native stocks to the natural population dynamics of the same species from
Chequamegon Bay, Lake Superior (an area with very few ruffe) were developed, where there
was a 24-year record of density. Using these data, short- and long-term variations in
catch and correlations among species within years were compared, and species-specific
distributions were developed of observed trends in abundance of native fishes in
Chequamegon Bay indexed by the slopes of densities across years. From these distributions
and our observed trend-line slopes from the St. Louis River, probabilities of measuring
negative change at the magnitude observed in the St. Louis River were estimated. Compared
with trends in Chequamegon Bay, there was a high probability of obtaining the negative
slopes measured for most species, which suggests natural population dynamics could
explain, the declines rather than interactions with ruffe. Variable recruitment, which was
not related to ruffe density, and associated density-dependent changes in mortality likely
were responsible for density declines of native species.
Contact: C.R. Bronte, US Geological Survey, Biological
Resources Division, 2800 Lake Shore Dr. E, Ashland, WI 54806
Keywords: Ruffe, Population_dynamics, Monitoring, Environmental_impacts
Product Type: Research,
Impact
User Type: Resource_Management
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