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Edsall, T.A., 1999. Preferred Temperatures of Juvenille Lake Whitefish, U.S.
Geological Survey.
Reprinted from Journal of Great Lakes Research (1999) 25(3): 583-588
Preferred Temperatures of Juvenille Lake Whitefish
Abstract
Lake whitefish (Coregonus clupeaformis) supported valuable commercial fisheries in all of the Great Lakes until the 1950s to 1960s when their populations collapsed due to
overfishing, pollution, and predation by the exotic sea lamprey (Petromyzon
marinus). Reduction of these population stresses has permitted significant recovery of the lake whitefish in the upper three Great Lakes since the 1980s and limited but encouraging recovery is now apparent in Lakes Erie and Ontario. In the present study the thermal preferences of age-0 and
age-1 lake whitefish were measured in the laboratory to provide a basis for determining thermal habitat use by juvenile lake whitefish and thermal niche overlap with exotic fishes that might prey on them. Final thermal preferenda of young lake whitefish varied inversely with fish size ranging from 16.8°C for fish averaging 1.9 g to 15.6°C for age-l fish averaging 3.9 g. Final thermal preferenda were in agreement with the limited published information on temperature selection of juvenile lake whitefish in the laboratory and on thermal habitat use by wild, free-ranging populations in the Great Lakes.
Entire Paper
Contact: Thomas Edsall, U.S. Geological Survey, Great Lakes Science Center,
1451 Green Road, Ann Arbor, MI 48105
Key Words: Sea_lamprey, Environmental_impacts,
Population_dynamics
Product Type: Research,
Impact
User Type: General
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