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A Spatial Analysis of Fish Habitats in Coastal Wetlands of the Laurentian Great Lakes

The overall objective of this study was to provide a spatial pattern analysis offish distribution in the Great Lakes and to relate these patterns to shoreline features such as coastal wetlands, tributaries and substrate type. Very little is known regarding the distribution patterns of fish in the Great Lakes at the geographical scale of each lake basin. I first explored whether there were systematic patterns in distribution offish and coastal wetlands by looking at density maps of each and calculating nearest neighbor distances. I used three different classification schemes to sort the 139 fish taxa into functional categories to produce ecologically meaningful distribution maps. There were striking differences in the overall distribution pattern of nursery and spawning habitat in the five Great Lakes when data were compared for Jude and Pappas' classification taxocenes: open-water, intermediate and coastal. Overall, open-water species were the most abundant, and were also widely distributed throughout all five lakes. Coastal species were the least abundant and appeared to be restricted to the two lower lakes. The distribution pattern of coastal and intermediate taxa overlapped a great deal; both taxocenes made extensive use of the two lower lakes for spawning and nursery habitat during this synoptic survey, especially in western Lake Erie and eastern Lake Ontario. Fish distribution patterns sorted by thermal preference and by reproductive guild were compared with those sorted by taxocene. Results from a chi-square analysis indicated a high degree of overlap between thermal classes and taxocenes. There were also positive associations between many reproductive guilds and the three taxocenes, although these were not as strong as the previous comparison. I then examined spatial association between distributions of fish and coastal wetlands and other geomorphic features by testing the distribution offish along the shore of the Great Lakes and calculating the correlation between fish and coastal wetlands of Lake Ontario. A chi-square goodness-of-fit test indicated strong associations between the distribution offish and three shoreline classes: (wetland, sandy beach/dunes and bluff) and fish used coast~cl wetlands preferentially for spawning and nursery habitat at a basin-wide scale. Bivariate pattern analysis indicated that occurrences offish in L. Ontario were positively associated with both coastal wetlands and tributaries, although the relationship was considerably weaker for tributaries than for wetlands. Results from this study indicated that 1) Fish have an aggregated distribution pattern along the shores of Great Lakes and L. Ontario; 2) Coastal wetlands have an aggregated distribution pattern along the shores of Great Lakes and L. Ontario; 3) Spatial distribution offish and wetlands is positively associated; 4) The preferred utilization of coastal wetlands by majority of the Great Lakes fishes is consistent across geographic scales, from the site level to that of the entire Great Lakes basin. / Thesis / Master of Science (MSc)

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:mcmaster.ca/oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/22401
Date08 1900
CreatorsWei, Anhua
ContributorsChow-Fraser, Patricia, Biology
Source SetsMcMaster University
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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