Author:
Castonguay M.,Hodson P. V.,Couillard C. M.,Eckersley M. J.,Dutil J.-D.,Verreault G.
Abstract
We critically review four potential causes of a drastic decline in juvenile American eels, Anguilla rostrata, recruiting to Lake Ontario (81-fold decline from 1985 to 1992) and in juvenile eel densities in tributaries to the Gulf of St. Lawrence. Silver eels from the St. Lawrence River were much more contaminated and had a high prevalence of deformities and lesions than a reference stock although they were on average less contaminated in 1990 than in 1982 (1.12 versus 4.54 μgg−1 for PCB; 0.025 versus 0.07 μg∙g−1 for mirex). Lethal toxicity from chemical contamination has been known to occur in St. Lawrence River eels for the past 25–30 yr. Major habitat modifications in the St. Lawrence took place in the 1950's (St. Lawrence Seaway and hydroelectric dams), about 30 yr before recruitment started declining; this long delay argues against these perturbations being primary causes of the decline. There is little evidence that commercial fishing and oceanographic changes caused the decline. Overall, we conclude that we do not know what caused the pronounced recruitment decline. We propose research avenues and hypotheses that may advance understanding and emphasize that because of panmixia, the recruitment decline could be species wide.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Subject
Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
129 articles.
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