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Feeding ecology of the walleye (Percidae, Sander vitreus ), a resurgent piscivore in Lake Huron (Laurentian Great Lakes) after shifts in the prey community
Author(s) -
Pothoven Steven A.,
Madenjian Charles P.,
Höök Tomas O.
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
ecology of freshwater fish
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.667
H-Index - 55
eISSN - 1600-0633
pISSN - 0906-6691
DOI - 10.1111/eff.12315
Subject(s) - bay , dorosoma , perch , piscivore , fishery , percidae , notropis , gizzard shad , predation , apex predator , minnow , biology , ecology , round goby , predator , geography , fish <actinopterygii> , archaeology
Abstract Recovering populations of piscivores can challenge understanding of ecosystem function due to impacts on prey and to potentially altered food webs supporting their production. Stocks of walleye (Percidae, Sander vitreus ), an apex predator in the Laurentian Great Lakes, crashed in the mid‐1900s. Management efforts led to recovery by 2009, but recovery coincided with environmental and fish community changes that also had implications for the feeding ecology of walleye. To evaluate potential changes in feeding ecology for this apex predator, we assessed diets in the main basin of Lake Huron and in Saginaw Bay, a large embayment of Lake Huron, during 2009–2011. Walleye switched their diets differently in the main basin and Saginaw Bay, with non‐native round goby (Gobiidae, Neogobius melanostomus ) and rainbow smelt (Osmeridae, Osmerus mordax ) more prevalent in diets in the main basin, and invertebrates, yellow perch (Percidae, Perca flavescens ) and gizzard shad (Clupeidae, Dorosoma cepedianum ) more prevalent in diets in the bay. Feeding strategy plots indicated that there was a high degree of individual specialisation by walleye in the bay and the main basin. Bioenergetic simulations indicated that walleye in Saginaw Bay need to consume 10%–18% more food than a walleye that spends part or all of the year in the main basin, respectively, in order to achieve the same growth rate. The differences in diets between the bay and main basin highlight the flexibility of this apex predator in the face of environmental changes, but changes in diet can alter energy pathways supporting piscivore production.

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