**The title, authors, and abstract for this completion
report are provided below. For a copy of
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A
Model Based Evaluation of How Stocking Oncorhynchus
Influences the Fish Communities
of Lakes Huron and Ontario
Travis
O. Brenden2 and James R. Bence2
2 Quantitative Fisheries Center, Department of Fisheries
and Wildlife, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan 48824
October 2009
ABSTRACT:
We
developed offshore fish community models for lakes Huron and Ontario to
forecast the potential consequences to changes in Pacific salmonid
Oncorhynchus stocking policies by the
states of New York and Michigan and the province of Ontario. The Lake Huron
forecasting model included Chinook salmon Oncorhynchus
tshawytscha, lake trout Salvelinus
namaycush, steelhead Oncorhynchus
mykiss, walleye Sander vitreus,
and burbot Lota lota as predators; the Lake Ontario forecasting model
included Chinook salmon, lake trout, steelhead, Atlantic salmon Salmo salar, brown
trout Salmo trutta,
and coho salmon Oncorhynchus
kisutch as predators. Alewife Alosa
pseudoharengus and rainbow smelt Osmerus mordax were
the primary prey species for both models. Evaluated stocking policies ranged
from a complete cessation in stocking of all Pacific salmonids
to a doubling of the 2003-2005 average stocking rate. Policies were evaluated
using metrics that captured the desire to have high, stable catches of lake
trout and Chinook salmon and large sizes of Chinook salmon. The susceptibility
of alewife and rainbow smelt populations being driven to low adult abundance
levels was also measured for the policy evaluations simulations. We found that
for Lake Huron decreases in Pacific salmonid stocking
rates were predicted to increase biomass and fishery yield of lake trout and
age-3 Chinook salmon spawning weights throughout the lake; additionally,
recreational yield of Chinook salmon was predicted to increase
in the Main Basin of Lake Huron. Biomass of alewife and rainbow smelt biomass
also increased with decreases in Pacific salmonid stocking
rates; however, even with a complete cessation of all Pacific salmon stocking,
there still remained a high probability of prey abundance declining to below
threshold levels as a result of presumably high wild recruit of Chinook salmon.
The fish community of Lake Ontario was relatively
unaffected
by changes in Pacific salmon stocking policies because of higher prey
productivity and presumably low wild recruitment of Chinook salmon. The results
for both lakes Huron and Ontario were sensitive to assumptions about predator
wild recruitment, predator search efficiencies, and scaling of prey
stock-recruitment relationships. These sensitivities should be kept in mind in
any proposed changes in Pacific salmonid stocking
rates.