Seasonal patterns in growth, blood consumption, and effects on hosts by parasitic-phase sea lampreys in the Great Lakes: An individual-based model approach
Authored by Charles P Madenjian, PA Cochran, RA Bergstedt
Date Published: 2003
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Abstract
An individual-based model (IBM) was developed for sea lamprey
(Petromyzon marinus) populations in the Laurentian Great Lakes. The IBM
was then calibrated to observed growth, by season, for sea lampreys in
northern Lake Huron under two different water temperature regimes: a
regime experienced by Seneca-strain lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush)
and a regime experienced by Marquette-strain lake trout. Modeling
results indicated that seasonal blood consumption under the Seneca
regime was very similar to that under the Marquette regime. Simulated
mortality of lake trout directly due to blood removal by sea lampreys
occurred at nearly twice the rate during August and September under the
Marquette regime than under the Seneca regime. However, cumulative sea
lamprey-induced mortality on lake trout over the entire duration of the
sea lamprey's parasitic phase was only 7\% higher for the Marquette
regime compared with the Seneca regime. Thus, these modeling results
indicated that the strain composition of the host (lake trout)
population was not important in determining total number of lake trout
deaths or total blood consumption attributable to the sea lamprey
population, given the sea lamprey growth pattern. Regardless of water
temperature regime, both blood consumption rate by sea lampreys and rate
of sea lamprey-induced mortality on lake trout peaked in late October.
Elevated blood consumption in late October appeared to be unrelated to
changes in water temperature. The IBM approach should prove useful in
optimizing control of sea lampreys in the Laurentian Great Lakes.
Tags
Predation
Size
Survival
Michigan
Ontario
Trout salvelinus-namaycush
Huron
Petromyzon-marinus