35 research outputs found

    Mixed stock analysis of genetic compositions of lake sturgeon (Acipenser fulvescens) mixtures in Lake Michigan: hierarchical spatial heterogeneity and evidence of improving recruitment in Wisconsin spawning populations

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    Information regarding site occupancy of fish that migrate long distances during nonspawning periods together with estimates of recruitment trends for individual populations can be informative for management, especially when individuals from different spawning populations intermix and are sampled or harvested together. Tendencies for individuals from different populations to preferentially occupy specific regions increases vulnerability to anthropogenic and natural disturbances. Using mixed stock analysis (MSA), we estimated population-specific occupancy of lake sturgeon (Acipenser fulvescens) in open-water and nearshore regions of Lake Michigan across a hierarchy of spatial scales. Open-water mixture composition differed between Lake Michigan’s eastern and western basins. Significant heterogeneity in habitat occupancy was also observed at microgeographic scales throughout open-water regions of Green Bay, indicating nonrandom occupancy to regions proximal to natal streams. Estimates of relative recruitment levels determined from MSA extensions indicated increasing recruitment trends for spawning populations associated with Wisconsin tributaries (Oconto–Peshtigo, Fox, and Menominee rivers). Our lake sturgeon results demonstrate the utility of genetic data for informing management efforts for spatially structured, highly migratory species. Similar analyses could prove beneficial for species with similar characteristics

    Contributions of Lake Erie and Lake St. Clair Walleye Populations to the Saginaw Bay, Lake Huron, Recreational Fishery: Evidence from Genetic Stock Identification

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    <div><p></p><p>Genetic stock identification analyses were conducted to determine spawning population contributions to the recreational fishery for Walleyes <i>Sander vitreus</i> in Saginaw Bay, Lake Huron. Two spawning population groups were considered: (1) the Tittabawassee River, which has been identified as the largest source of spawning Walleyes for Saginaw Bay; and (2) an aggregate of six spawning populations from Lake Erie and Lake St. Clair that were found to be genetically similar. Overall, the Lake Erie and Lake St. Clair spawning populations were estimated to comprise approximately 26% of the Walleye recreational harvest in Saginaw Bay during 2008–2009. Contribution levels were similar for the 2 years in which genetic samples were collected. Contributions from the Lake Erie and Lake St. Clair spawning populations to the harvest of age-5 and older Walleyes were greater during summer (31.8%; SE = 6.2%) than during late winter and spring (6.0%; SE = 3.7%). Conversely, contributions from the Lake Erie and Lake St. Clair spawning populations to the harvest of age-3 and age-4 fish were fairly similar between seasons (late winter and spring: 31.2%, SE = 6.7%; summer: 41.7%, SE = 5.6%), suggesting that younger Walleyes migrate earlier or reside in Saginaw Bay for extended periods. Our finding that one-quarter of the Saginaw Bay recreational harvest of Walleyes comprises fish from Lake Erie and Lake St. Clair has important management implications, as policies for one lake may have bearing on the other lake—one of the challenges associated with managing migratory fish species. Fisheries management in the Laurentian Great Lakes has a history of being highly coordinated and cooperative among the states and province bordering the individual lakes. Results from this study suggest that cooperation may need to be expanded to account for fish movement between lakes.</p><p>Received October 28, 2014; accepted February 11, 2015</p></div

    Colonia e postcolonia come spazi diasporici. Attraversamenti di memorie, confini e identitĂ  nel Corno d'Africa

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    Colony and postcolony are analysed as symbolic, identity, cultural spaces in constant motion: like memories and memberships, even colonial boundaries are not always rigid and immovable, but crossed, in fact, by resources and people that make them flexible, porous, non-negotiable. The volume presents a series of crosscutting reading on multiple memberships in the Horn of Africa region and multiple penetrations that result, today as yesterday, by diasporic and transnational movements at their margins
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