Demographic Rate Variability of Bighead and Silver Carps Along an Invasion Gradient

Author:

Erickson Richard A.1,Kallis Jahn L.2,Coulter Alison A.3,Coulter David P.3,MacNamara Ruairí3,Lamer James T.4,Bouska Wesley W.5,Irons Kevin S.6,Solomon Levi E.4,Stump Andrew J.7,Weber Michael J.8,Brey Marybeth K.1,Sullivan Christopher J.8,Sass Greg G.9,Garvey James E.3,Glover David C.10

Affiliation:

1. R.A. Erickson, M.K. Brey U.S. Geological Survey, Upper Midwest Environmental Sciences Center, La Crosse, Wisconsin 54603

2. J.L. Kallis U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Columbia Fish and Wildlife Conservation Office, Columbia, Missouri 65203

3. A.A. Coulter, D.P. Coulter, J.E. Garvey, R. MacNamara Southern Illinois University, Center for Fisheries, Aquaculture, and Aquatic Sciences, Carbondale, Illinois 62901

4. J.T. Lamer, L.E. Solomon University of Illinois, Illinois River Biological Station, Illinois Natural History Survey, Prairie Research Institute, Havana, Illinois 62644

5. W.W. Bouska U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, La Crosse Fish and Wildlife Conservation Office, Onalaska, Wisconsin 54650

6. K.S. Irons Illinois Department of Natural Resources, Springfield, Illinois 62702

7. A.J. Stump Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601

8. M.J. Weber, C.J. Sullivan Iowa State University, Department of Natural Resource Ecology & Management, Ames, Iowa 50011

9. G.G. Sass Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources, Escanaba Lake Research Station, Office of Applied Science, Boulder Junction, Wisconsin 54512

10. D.C. Glover Illinois Department of Natural Resources, Havana, Illinois 62644

Abstract

Abstract Invasive Bighead Carp Hypophthalmichthys nobilis and Silver Carp H. molitrix have infested and caused largescale ecological and economic damage to the Illinois, Mississippi, and Ohio rivers. We compiled demographic data from 42,995 fish from 23 pools in the Illinois, Mississippi, and Ohio rivers, which universities and management agencies previously collected as part of management, monitoring, and research activities. We used this data set to test whether demographic rates (length–weight relations including body condition, mortality, growth curves, and female maturity curves) varied among subpopulations across a gradient of invasion status. We found that length–weight relations and growth curves varied among subpopulations, whereas maturity curves did not. Our findings demonstrated spatial variability in demographic rates for Bighead and Silver carp across a broad geographic area in relation to invasion status and river conditions. Herein, we provide general subpopulation management options and present different hypotheses to explain the observed spatial variability in demographic rates.

Publisher

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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