Synthesizing Professional Opinion and Published Science to Build a Conceptual Model of Walleye Recruitment

Author:

Krabbenhoft Corey A.1ORCID,Ludsin Stuart A.2ORCID,Marschall Elizabeth A.2ORCID,Budnik Richard R.2ORCID,Almeida L. Zoe3ORCID,Cahill Christopher L.4,Embke Holly S.5ORCID,Feiner Zachary S.67,Schmalz Patrick J.8,Thorstensen Matt J.9ORCID,Weber Michael J.10ORCID,Wuellner Melissa R.11ORCID,Hansen Gretchen J.A.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Fisheries, Wildlife, and Conservation Biology University of Minnesota 2003 Upper Buford St. Paul MN 55108

2. Aquatic Ecology Laboratory, Department of Evolution, Ecology, and Organismal Biology The Ohio State University Columbus OH

3. Hatfield Marine Science Center Oregon State University Newport OR

4. Department of Fisheries and Wildlife Michigan State University East Lansing MI

5. U.S. Geological Survey Midwest Climate Adaptation Science Center St. Paul MN

6. Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources, Office of Applied Science Science Operations Center Madison WI

7. Center for Limnology University of Wisconsin–Madison Madison WI

8. Minnesota Department of Natural Resources Section of Fisheries Duluth MN

9. Department of Biological Sciences University of Manitoba Winnipeg MB Canada

10. Department of Natural Resource Ecology and Management Iowa State University Ames IA

11. Department of Biology University of Nebraska at Kearney Kearney NE

12. Department of Fisheries, Wildlife, and Conservation Biology University of Minnesota St. Paul MN

Abstract

Understanding and predicting recruitment, longstanding goals in fisheries science and ecology, are complicated by variation in the importance of environmental drivers coupled with the dynamic nature of individual ecosystems. Developing an understanding of recruitment from well‐monitored stocks offers an opportunity to overcome these complexities. We used a systematic literature review, a survey, and a workshop attended by professionals with expertise in recruitment of WalleyeSander vitreusto identify common environmental drivers of Walleye recruitment and additional sources of variation (i.e., context dependencies) among populations. The importance of individual environmental drivers, as well as the direction of their influence, differed as a function of geographic region, lake surface area, and Walleye life stage. The literature suggested abiotic conditions (e.g., temperature) during the first year of life were influential in determining recruitment. Professional opinion noted the importance of biotic factors, with prey availability and predation risk having the most consistent relationships with recruitment. We synthesized this information to propose a conceptual model that illustrates the suite of characteristics that shape Walleye recruitment over large spatial and temporal scales. Our findings emphasize the importance of first‐year growth and system‐specific contextual factors, which can alter the relative importance of the environmental drivers of recruitment.

Funder

Great Lakes Fishery Commission

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources

U.S. Geological Survey

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Aquatic Science

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