Diets and growth potential of early stage larval yellow perch and alewife in a nearshore region of southeastern Lake Michigan
Authored by Jonah L Withers, Timothy M Sesterhenn, Carolyn J Foley, Cary D Troy, Tomas O Hoeoek
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.jglr.2015.08.003
Sponsors:
United States National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Transition from endogenous to exogenous feeding is thought to be a
critical period for many fish larvae, when prey availability (type, size, and density) and ambient physical conditions (e.g., temperature, water clarity) can strongly influence survival. In Lake Michigan, two
important fish species, yellow perch (Perca flavescens) and alewife
(Alosa pseudoharengus), hatch and, presumably, begin exogenously feeding
in the nearshore zone, an area characterized by short-term variation in
environmental conditions. During 2010-2011, we examined environmental
conditions and spatial and temporal distributions of larval yellow
perch, larval alewife, and their potential prey in a nearshore region of
southeastern Lake Michigan. To consider implications of environmental
conditions on larval fish habitat quality, we quantified diet contents
of young larval yellow perch and alewife and modeled bioenergetic growth
rate potential (an index of habitat quality) under observed and
predicted prey consumption scenarios. As expected, in this dynamic
nearshore zone temperatures, light levels, zooplankton prey
availability, and resulting growth rate potential were highly variable.
Many larval fish digestive tracts were empty, suggesting that starvation
may affect cohort survival. Among early-feeding larval fish, relatively
small diet items were common, with larval alewives consuming diatoms and
larval yellow perch consuming veligers of invasive dreissenid mussels.
Though the mechanisms underlying such prey consumption and the
consequences of ingesting these prey items remain largely unexplored, our results suggest dreissenid mussel veligers present early-feeding
larvae with a relatively abundant prey source that may partially offset
the apparent low consumption of other prey sources within Lake
Michigan's nearshore region. (C) 2015 The Authors. Published by Elsevier
B.V.
Tags
Foraging behavior
Individual-based
model
Laurentian great-lakes
Stizostedion-vitreum-vitreum
Prey selection
Recruitment variability
Alosa-pseudoharengus
Bioenergetics model
Light-intensity
Food-web