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Diet and Prey Selection by Lake Superior Lake Trout during Spring, 1986–2001
Authors:Bradley A. Ray  Thomas R. Hrabik  Mark P. Ebener  Owen T. Gorman  Donald R. Schreiner  Stephen T. Schram  Shawn P. Sitar  William P. Mattes  Charles R. Bronte
Affiliation:1 Department of Biology, University of Minnesota Duluth, 211 Life Science, 10 Univ. Dr., Duluth, Minnesota 55812;2 Chippewa/Ottawa Resource Authority, 179 W. Three Mile Road, Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan 49783;3 USGS Great Lakes Science Center, Lake Superior Biological Station, Ashland, Wisconsin 54812;4 Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, 5351 North Shore Drive, Duluth, Minnesota 55804;5 Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources, 141 S 3rd St. P.O. Box 589, Bayfield, Wisconsin 54814;6 Michigan Department of Natural Resources, 484 Cherry Creek Rd., Marquette, Michigan 49855;7 Great Lakes Indian Fish and Wildlife Commission, P.O. Box 9, Odanah, Wisconsin 54861;8 U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Green Bay Fishery Resources, 2661 Scott Tower Drive, New Franken, Wisconsin 54229
Abstract:We describe the diet and prey selectivity of lean (Salvelinus namaycush namaycush) and siscowet lake trout (S. n. siscowet) collected during spring (April–June) from Lake Superior during 1986–2001. We estimated prey selectivity by comparing prey numerical abundance estimates from spring bottom trawl surveys and lake trout diet information in similar areas from spring gill net surveys conducted annually in Lake Superior. Rainbow smelt (Osmerus mordax) was the most common prey and was positively selected by both lean and siscowet lake trout throughout the study. Selection by lean lake trout for coregonine (Coregonus spp.) prey increased after 1991 and corresponded with a slight decrease in selection for rainbow smelt. Siscowet positively selected for rainbow smelt after 1998, a change that was coincident with the decrease in selection for this prey item by lean lake trout. However, diet overlap between lean and siscowet lake trout was not strong and did not change significantly over the study period. Rainbow smelt remains an important prey species for lake trout in Lake Superior despite declines in abundance.
Keywords:Lake trout   diet   Lake Superior   prey selectivity   siscowet
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