首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Great Lakes coastal fish habitat classification and assessment
Authors:Katya E Kovalenko  Lucinda B Johnson  Catherine M Riseng  Matthew J Cooper  Kristofer Johnson  Lacey A Mason  James E McKenna  Beth L Sparks-Jackson  Donald G Uzarski
Affiliation:1. Natural Resources Research Institute, University of Minnesota Duluth, 5013 Miller Trunk Highway, Duluth, MN, USA;2. School for Environment and Sustainability, University of Michigan, 400 Church Street, Ann Arbor, MI, USA;3. Burke Center for Freshwater Innovation, Northland College, 1411 Ellis Avenue, Ashland, WI, USA;4. Tunison Laboratory of Aquatic Science, USGS Great Lakes Science Center, Cortland, NY 13045, USA;5. Institute for Great Lakes Research, CMU Biological Station, and Department of Biology, Central Michigan University, Mount Pleasant, MI, 48859, USA
Abstract:Basin-scale assessment of fish habitat in Great Lakes coastal ecosystems would increase our ability to prioritize fish habitat management and restoration actions. As a first step in this direction, we identified key habitat factors associated with highest probability of occurrence for several societally and ecologically important coastal fish species as well as community metrics, using data from the Great Lakes Aquatic Habitat Framework (GLAHF), Great Lakes Environmental Indicators (GLEI) and Coastal Wetland Monitoring Program (CWMP). Secondly, we assessed whether species-specific habitat was threatened by watershed-level anthropogenic stressors. In the southern Great Lakes, key habitat factors for determining presence/absence of several species of coastal fish were chlorophyll concentrations, turbidity, and wave height, whereas in the northern ecoprovince temperature was the major habitat driver for most of the species modeled. Habitat factors best explaining fish richness and diversity were bottom slope and chlorophyll a. These models could likely be further improved with addition of high-resolution submerged macrophyte complexity data which are currently unavailable at the basin-wide scale. Proportion of invasive species was correlated primarily with increasing maximum observed inorganic turbidity and chlorophyll a. We also demonstrate that preferred habitat for several coastal species and high-diversity areas overlap with areas of high watershed stress. Great Lakes coastal wetland fish are a large contributor to ecosystem services as well as commercial and recreational fishery harvest, and scalable basin-wide habitat models developed in this study may be useful for informing management actions targeting specific species or overall coastal fish biodiversity.
Keywords:Coastal wetlands  Invasive fish habitat models  Fish biodiversity models  Anthropogenic threats  Habitat variability  Random Forests
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号