Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
8849169 Journal of Great Lakes Research 2018 8 Pages PDF
Abstract
Lake trout were extirpated from Lake Champlain by 1900, and are currently the focus of intensive efforts to restore a self-sustaining population. Stocking of yearling lake trout since 1972 has re-established adult populations, spawning occurs at multiple sites lake-wide, and fry production at several sites is very high. However, little to no recruitment past age-0 has occurred, as evidenced by the absence of adults without hatchery fin clips in fall assessments; no regular sampling for juveniles is conducted. We began focused sampling for juvenile lake trout in fall, 2015, in the Main Lake using bottom trawling, and expanded sampling to sites in the north and south of the lake in 2016. In 2015 we collected 303 lake trout < 350 mm total length, of which 23.8% were unclipped. Based on non-overlapping length modes, these wild fish comprised at least three age classes (young-of-year, age-1, and age-2). In 2016, we collected 1215 lake trout < 350 mm, including a fourth wild year class (2016 young-of-year). Forty-nine percent of juvenile lake trout from the Main Lake were unclipped; however, only 20% from the north lake and 9% from the south lake were unclipped. The absence of older unclipped fish indicates that recruitment of wild fish began recently. We discuss several hypotheses to explain this sudden, substantial recruitment success, and factors that may be affecting lake trout restoration in Lake Champlain and the Great Lakes.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth and Planetary Sciences (General)
Authors
, , ,