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Trends in Early Spring Lake Superior Zooplankton Communities, 1989-2000. Owen Gorman and Lori Evrard U.S. Geological Survey Lake Superior Biological Station. Introduction. Multi-year, inshore zooplankton assessments in Lake Superior are rare.
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Trends in Early Spring Lake Superior Zooplankton Communities, 1989-2000 Owen Gorman and Lori Evrard U.S. Geological Survey Lake Superior Biological Station
Introduction • Multi-year, inshore zooplankton assessments in Lake Superior are rare. • Published studies on foodweb/trophic dynamics in lower Great Lakes demonstrate tight linkage between zooplankton and prey fish populations • Linkage between Lake Superior inshore zooplankton community dynamics and prey fish populations has not been previously demonstrated.
Objectives • Assess long-term trends in Lake Superior inshore zooplankton communities. • Compare zooplankton communities from different regions of Lake Superior. • Identify potential impacts of planktivore fish populations on zooplankton communities. • Utilize large set of zooplankton samples taken by USGS over a 12 year period (1989-2000) during spring prey fish assessment cruises.
Study Areas • Criteria for selection of ecoregions for analysis: • region with distinct geographic and environmental features • more than 5 continuous years of data • 5 or more sample locations per region • Compare inshore zooplankton communities from four ecoregions of Lake Superior • Ecoregions sampled: MNNS – Minnesota North Shore (8 sites, 11 yrs) APIS – Apostle Islands (9 sites, 12 yrs,) EKEW – Eastern Keweenaw Bay (5 sites, 10 yrs) WFBY – Whitefish Bay (6 sites, 6 yrs)
Methods • Sampling conducted in Spring, typically within 30 days following ice-out. • Zooplankton sampled with 50 cm, 63 F mesh conical net, towed vertically from bottom to top of water column. • Three, 1-ml subsamples from each sample were enumerated and results averaged. • Abundance was expressed as # zooplankters per m3 for the entire water column. • Abundance values for sites within an ecoregion were averaged for each year sampled.
Dominant zooplankton species in Lake Superior spring samples • Calanoid copepods • Limnocalanus macrurus • Diaptomus sicilis • Cyclopoid copepods • Diacyclops thomasi • Other copepods and cladocerans are rare at this time of year.
Limnocalanus macrurus 2.0-2.5 mm length, overwinters as adults, spawns February-March; 1 generation/year. Adults and nauplii present in spring.
Diaptomus sicilis 1.5-2.0 mm length, overwinters as adults, reproduces March-May; 1 +? Generation/year. Adults and nauplii present in spring.
Diacyclops thomasi 1.0-1.5 mm length, overwinters as copopodites, reproduces June-September; 2 +? generations/year. Adults present in spring.
Relative Abundance of Zooplankton Taxa by Ecoregion and Year
Conclusions - 1 • Spring zooplankton communities in Lake Superior were dominated by large calanoid copepods, indicating an oligotrophic condition. • There was strong year-to-year variation in zooplankter density and composition of zooplankton communities. • Inter-regional variation in plankton communities was evident; eastern regions were more consistently dominated by larger calanoids.
Conclusions - 2 • The Apostle Islands ecoregion, with the greatest densities of fish, had the lowest average zooplankton density, smallest average zooplanton size and a greater proportion of the smaller cyclopoid copepods. • A strong trophic interaction between fish and zooplankton was evident in the Apostle Islands region.