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Estimates of lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) diet in Lake Ontario using two and three isotope mixing models

Authors :
Gordon Paterson
Brian F. Lantry
Aaron T. Fisk
Scott A. Rush
Timothy B. Johnson
Scott F. Colborne
Source :
Great Lakes Institute for Environmental Research Publications
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Scholarship at UWindsor, 2016.

Abstract

Recent development of multi-dimensional stable isotope models for estimating both foraging patterns and niches have presented the analytical tools to further assess the food webs of freshwater populations. One approach to refine predictions from these analyses is to include a third isotope to the more common two-isotope carbon and nitrogen mixing models to increase the power to resolve different prey sources. We compared predictions made with two-isotope carbon and nitrogen mixing models and three-isotope models that also included sulphur (δ34S) for the diets of Lake Ontario lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush). We determined the isotopic compositions of lake trout and potential prey fishes sampled from Lake Ontario and then used quantitative estimates of resource use generated by two- and three-isotope Bayesian mixing models (SIAR) to infer feeding patterns of lake trout. Both two- and three-isotope models indicated that alewife (Alosa pseudoharengus) and round goby (Neogobius melanostomus) were the primary prey items, but the three-isotope models were more consistent with recent measures of prey fish abundances and lake trout diets. The lake trout sampled directly from the hatcheries had isotopic compositions derived from the hatchery food which were distinctively different from those derived from the natural prey sources. Those hatchery signals were retained for months after release, raising the possibility to distinguish hatchery-reared yearlings and similarly sized naturally reproduced lake trout based on isotopic compositions. Addition of a third-isotope resulted in mixing model results that confirmed round goby have become an important component of lake trout diet and may be overtaking alewife as a prey resource.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Great Lakes Institute for Environmental Research Publications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7d38520043c6bbd82d0fdbb5f6107bb6