Larval cisco and lake whitefish exhibit high distributional overlap within nursery areas

Author:

Brown Taylor A.12ORCID,Rudstam Lars G.1ORCID,Holden Jeremy P.3ORCID,Weidel Brian C.4ORCID,Ackiss Amanda S.5ORCID,Ropp Ann J.5ORCID,Chalupnicki Marc A.6ORCID,McKenna James E.6ORCID,Sethi Suresh A.7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Cornell Biological Field Station Department of Natural Resources and the Environment Cornell University Bridgeport New York USA

2. New York Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit Department of Natural Resources and the Environment Cornell University Ithaca New York USA

3. Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry Picton Ontario Canada

4. Lake Ontario Biological Station U.S. Geological Survey Great Lakes Science Center Oswego New York USA

5. U.S. Geological Survey Great Lakes Science Center Ann Arbor Michigan USA

6. Tunison Laboratory of Aquatic Sciences U.S. Geological Survey Great Lakes Science Center Cortland New York USA

7. New York Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit Department of Natural Resources and the Environment Cornell University, U.S. Geological Survey Ithaca New York USA

Abstract

AbstractCoregonine fishes, including lake whitefish (Coregonus clupeaformis) and cisco (C. artedi), are socioecologically important in the Laurentian Great Lakes and of conservation concern, but the processes driving recruitment variability are unclear. In Lake Ontario, cisco and lake whitefish exhibit similar spawning behaviours and early life histories, but population trajectories are diverging. One hypothesis is that sympatric cisco and lake whitefish larvae occupy distinct habitats and experience dissimilar local environmental conditions, despite co‐occurrence within nursery areas. We described the spatiotemporal distributions of larval cisco and lake whitefish among multiple Lake Ontario embayment nursery areas, characterised physical habitat features associated with their distributions, determined the degree of spatial habitat partitioning between species and evaluated how habitat niche divergence occurred along an ontogenetic progression. Both species were widely distributed across larval nursery areas, though lake whitefish were less abundant and more narrowly distributed than cisco. Within the yolk sac stage, lake whitefish occupied more nearshore, shallower and colder waters than cisco, indicating potential habitat niche partitioning between congeners. However, distributional differences were subtle and likely driven by differential hatch timing and staggered ontogenetic habitat shifts. Combined, our results illustrate similar habitat use between cisco and lake whitefish through the larval stage and demonstrate that ontogeny and species‐specific phenology influence habitat use for these species. This study provides additional evidence that the early life histories of cisco and lake whitefish are highly similar and does not support the hypothesis that larval habitat use differences are a major driver of differential recruitment success for these species.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference102 articles.

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