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A Comparison of Methods for Sampling Fish Diversity in Shallow Offshore Waters of Large Rivers
Author(s) -
Lapointe Nicolas W. R.,
Corkum Lynda D.,
Mandrak Nicholas E.
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
north american journal of fisheries management
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.587
H-Index - 72
eISSN - 1548-8675
pISSN - 0275-5947
DOI - 10.1577/m05-091.1
Subject(s) - species richness , minnow , abundance (ecology) , fishery , electrofishing , notropis , leuciscus , environmental science , species diversity , catch per unit effort , ecology , geography , biology , fish <actinopterygii>
Few studies of fish assemblages have been conducted in large rivers owing to the difficulties of sampling such complex systems. We evaluated the effectiveness of six different gear types (seine nets, boat electrofishers, hoop nets, Windermere traps, trap nets, and minnow traps) in sampling the fish assemblage at 30 sites in the shallow offshore waters of the middle Detroit River in July and August 2003. A total of 2,449 fish representing 38 species in 15 families were captured by seining (1,293 fish, 29 species), boat electrofishing (398 fish, 23 species), hoop nets (524 fish, 26 species), and Windermere traps (234 fish, 14 species). Trap nets and minnow traps were not effective in sampling offshore littoral sites. Significantly higher fish species richness and abundance were obtained and more unique species were captured by seine nets than by any other gear type. When effort is constant, the highest richness and abundance are obtained by seine nets. Windermere traps produced significantly lower abundance and richness than all other gear types, but proportionally more benthic species. Total species accumulation rates were not markedly reduced when Windermere trap data were excluded. Use of additional Windermere traps at each site could increase abundance, but samples taken by Windermere traps had the lowest rarefied richness among gear types at any level of abundance. Nonmetric multidimensional scaling showed that seine‐net catches, which were dominated by midwater schooling species (brook silverside Labidesthes sicculus , emerald shiner Notropis atherinoides , and mimic shiner N. volucellus ), were most dissimilar from Windermere trap catches, which were dominated by centrarchids. Seine nets were the most effective gear for sampling offshore waters.

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