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Movement of Walleyes in Lakes Erie and St. Clair Inferred from Tag Return and Fisheries Data
Author(s) -
Wang HuiYu,
Rutherford Edward S.,
Cook H. Andrew,
Einhouse Donald W.,
Haas Robert C.,
Johnson Timothy B.,
Kenyon Roger,
Locke Brian,
Turner Mark W.
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
transactions of the american fisheries society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.696
H-Index - 86
eISSN - 1548-8659
pISSN - 0002-8487
DOI - 10.1577/t06-012.1
Subject(s) - fishery , structural basin , catch per unit effort , stock (firearms) , geography , oceanography , environmental science , fish <actinopterygii> , geology , biology , archaeology , paleontology
Abstract Lake Erie walleyes Sander vitreus support important fisheries and have been managed as one stock, although preliminary tag return and genetic analyses suggest the presence of multiple stocks that migrate among basins within Lake Erie and into other portions of the Great Lakes. We examined temporal and spatial movement and abundance patterns of walleye stocks in the three basins of Lake Erie and in Lake St. Clair with the use of tag return and sport and commercial catch‐per‐unit effort (CPUE) data from 1990 to 2001. Based on summer tag returns, western basin walleyes migrated to the central and eastern basins of Lake Erie and to Lake St. Clair and southern Lake Huron, while fish in the central and eastern basins of Lake Erie and in Lake St. Clair were primarily caught within the basins where they were tagged. Seasonal changes in sport and commercial effort and CPUE in Lake Erie confirmed the walleye movements suggested by tag return data. Walleyes tagged in the western basin but recaptured in the central or eastern basin of Lake Erie were generally larger (or older) than those recaptured in the western basin of Lake Erie or in Lake St. Clair. Within spawning stocks, female walleyes had wider ranges of movement than males and there was considerable variation in movement direction, minimum distance moved (mean distance between tagging sites and recapture locations), and mean length among individual spawning stocks. Summer temperatures in the western basin often exceeded the optimal temperature (20–23°C) for growth of large walleyes, and the migration of western basin walleyes might represent a size‐dependent response to warm summer temperatures. Cooler temperatures and abundant soft‐rayed fish probably contributed to an energetically favorable foraging habitat in the central and eastern basins that attracted large walleyes during summer.

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