**The title,
authors, and abstract for this completion report are provided below. For further
information on this research, please contact the GLFC via
e-mail or via telephone at 734-662-3209 -or- contact the P.I. directly**
Preserved
fish as a restoration tool: use of stable isotopes to reconstruct historical Great Lakes food webs
November 2007
Jake
Vander Zanden
Center for Limnology,
University of Wisconsin
- Madison,
680 N. Park St.
Madison
WI 53706 USA
ABSTRACT:
Numerous non-native species have entered the Great Lakes in the last century, and are partially
responsible for the decline of native fish species such as the deepwater
ciscoes. We used stable isotope analysis (d13C, d15N) of museum archived specimens to evaluate food web
change in Lake Michigan and Superior
over the last century. We characterized the food web for each lake over
time to examine how introductions of non-native species may have altered the
food webs. The purpose of this project was three-fold: 1) determine
the degree to which each lake food web has changed over time, 2) evaluate
historical niche partitioning among-deepwater coregonids, and 3) provide an historical context for
future fisheries management objectives. Understanding how the food web
structure of the Great Lakes has changed over
the last century will lend insight into future management policies, including
the reintroduction of extirpated native species. To compare food webs over
time, we first developed a statistical tool to quantify food web differences
(Appendix I). We found that the food web structure of Lake
Superior did not change over the last century (Appendix II).
Lake Michigan, however, had a food web
structure that changed in response to non-native species introductions over
time (Appendix III). In addition, we were able to gain significant insight into
the historical ecological partitioning of the deepwater coregonines. Stable isotope analysis revealed
ecological niche partitioning between shortjaw
and shortnose ciscoes in Lake Superior; two species that were previously argued to
be indistinguishable based on morphological characteristics. We also show
that the diverse endemic deepwater coregonines
were historically distinct from one another (Appendix IV). Depth partitioning
was evident in the carbon values of the deepwater coregonines. Isotope analysis revealed
distinct ecological differences among all species in four Great
Lakes. Furthermore, those species that were most distinct
from one another (i.e. kiyi,
bloater, and shortjaw cisco) are species that have
persisted to the present. Ecologically, the deepwater coregonines were unique from one another and the
pattern in ecological partitioning was similar across lakes. This
suggests that the deepwater communities of Lakes Superior and Nipigon could
potentially serve as sources for reintroduction of deepwater coregonines. By providing a
historical context of trophic niche partitioning of
native and non-native species, our findings lend insight into how the Great Lakes fish community has changed over the past
century.