横跨中西部四条大河的海峡鲶鱼和淡水鼓鱼人口统计

IF 1.3 4区 环境科学与生态学 Q3 ECOLOGY Journal of Freshwater Ecology Pub Date : 2022-04-30 DOI:10.1080/02705060.2022.2072008
Andrya L Whitten, Jason A. DeBoer, Sabina Berry, Cassi J. Moody‐Carpenter, Benjamin J. Lubinski, N. Rude, J. Chick, Robert E. Colombo, G. Whitledge, J. Lamer
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引用次数: 1

摘要

摘要海峡鲶鱼(Ictalurus puncatus)和淡水鼓形鲶鱼(Aplodinots grunniens)是美国中西部大型河流中两种重要的商业和娱乐物种。了解他们的人口统计数据对于管理可持续人口至关重要。在这项研究中,我们确定并比较了伊利诺伊河以及密西西比河、俄亥俄河和沃巴什河河段的鲶鱼和淡水鼓的体型结构、个体生长和死亡率估计值,为管理这些种群提供了当前的基线。结果表明,两种鱼类在不同河流的体型结构上存在差异。与所有其他河流相比,密西西比河淡水鼓增长率最高,理论最大长度最低,俄亥俄河年死亡率最低。不同河流的鲶鱼生长没有差异,但密西西比河的年死亡率明显高于沃巴什河。鉴于这两种鱼类的重要性,更好地了解它们在这些系统中的种群统计数据对于改进当前和未来的渔业管理计划至关重要。
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Channel catfish and freshwater drum population demographics across four large Midwestern rivers
Abstract Channel catfish (Ictalurus puncatus) and freshwater drum (Aplodinotus grunniens) are two commercially and recreationally important species in large rivers of the Midwestern United States. Understanding their population demographics is essential to managing sustainable populations. In this study, we determined and compared the size structure, individual growth, and mortality estimates of channel catfish and freshwater drum among the Illinois River and sections of the Mississippi, Ohio, and Wabash rivers to provide a current baseline for managing these populations. Results suggest that both fishes differed in size structure among rivers. Compared to all other rivers, the Mississippi River freshwater drum growth rate was the highest and the theoretical maximum length was the lowest, and the Ohio River annual mortality was lowest. Channel catfish growth did not differ among rivers, but annual mortality was significantly higher in the Mississippi River compared to the Wabash River. Given the importance of these two fishes, better understanding of their population demographics in these systems is essential to improving current and future fisheries management programs.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
7.70%
发文量
34
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: The Journal of Freshwater Ecology, published since 1981, is an open access peer-reviewed journal for the field of aquatic ecology of freshwater systems that is aimed at an international audience of researchers and professionals. Its coverage reflects the wide diversity of ecological subdisciplines and topics, including but not limited to physiological, population, community, and ecosystem ecology as well as biogeochemistry and ecohydrology of all types of freshwater systems including lentic, lotic, hyporheic and wetland systems. Studies that improve our understanding of anthropogenic impacts and changes to freshwater systems are also appropriate.
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