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result(s) for
"Rennie, Michael D."
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Broad shifts in the resource use of a commercially harvested fish following the invasion of dreissenid mussels
by
Rennie, Michael D.
,
Dunlop, Erin S.
,
Fera, Shannon A.
in
Aquatic ecosystems
,
aquatic invasive species
,
Benthic fauna
2017
Dreissenid mussels, including the zebra (Dreissena polymorpha) and quagga (Dreissena rostiformus bugensis) mussel, are invasive species known for their capacity to act as ecosystem engineers. They have caused significant changes in the many freshwater systems they have invaded by increasing water clarity, reducing primary productivity, and altering Zooplankton and benthic invertebrate assemblages. What is less clear is how their ecosystem engineering effects manifest up the food web to impact higher trophic levels, including fish. Here, we use a biological tracer (stable isotopes of carbon and nitrogen) to analyze long-term and broad-scale trends in the resource use of benthivorous lake whitefish (Coregonus clupeaformis) in the Laurentian Great Lakes, where dreissenid mussels have become established in each lake except Lake Superior. We measured stable isotope ratios from archived material (fish scale samples) collected over several decades by multiple agencies and from 14 locations around the Great Lakes. In the majority of locations, the δ13C of lake whitefish increased following the establishment of dreissenid mussels. Trends in δ15N were less clear, but significant breakpoints in the time series occurred within 5 yr of dreissenid establishment in several locations, followed by declines in δ15N. In contrast, isotopic signatures in Lake Superior locations did not show these trends. Our results provide evidence that lake whitefish shifted toward greater reliance on nearshore benthic production, supporting the theory that fundamental energy pathways are changed when dreissenid mussels become established. Importantly, these effects were noted across multiple, large, and complex ecosystems spanning a broad geographic area. Our study underscores the potential for aquatic invasive species to alter key ecosystem services as demonstrated here through their impacts on energy pathways supporting a commercially harvested fish species.
Journal Article
Behavioral responses to annual temperature variation alter the dominant energy pathway, growth, and condition of a cold-water predator
by
Rennie, Michael D.
,
Guzzo, Matthew M.
,
Blanchfield, Paul J.
in
Abundance
,
Acoustic telemetry
,
Animal populations
2017
There is a pressing need to understand how ecosystems will respond to climate change. To date, no long-term empirical studies have confirmed that fish populations exhibit adaptive foraging behavior in response to temperature variation and the potential implications this has on fitness. Here, we use an unparalleled 11-y acoustic telemetry, stable isotope, and mark–recapture dataset to test if a population of lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush), a coldwater stenotherm, adjusted its use of habitat and energy sources in response to annual variations in lake temperatures during the open-water season and how these changes translated to the growth and condition of individual fish. We found that climate influenced access to littoral regions in spring (data from telemetry), which in turn influenced energy acquisition (data from isotopes), and growth (mark–recapture data). In more stressful years, those with shorter springs and longer summers, lake trout had reduced access to littoral habitat and assimilated less littoral energy, resulting in reduced growth and condition. Annual variation in prey abundance influenced lake trout foraging tactics (i.e., the balance of the number and duration of forays) but not the overall time spent in littoral regions. Lake trout greatly reduced their use of littoral habitat and occupied deep pelagic waters during the summer. Together, our results provide clear evidence that climate-mediated behavior can influence the dominant energy pathways of top predators, with implications ranging from individual fitness to food web stability.
Journal Article
Direct and indirect responses of a freshwater food web to a potent synthetic oestrogen
by
Rennie, Michael D.
,
Kidd, Karen A.
,
Liber, Karsten
in
Animals
,
Aquatic Toxicology
,
Catostomus
2014
Endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs) in municipal effluents directly affect the sexual development and reproductive success of fishes, but indirect effects on invertebrate prey or fish predators through reduced predation or prey availability, respectively, are unknown. At the Experimental Lakes Area in northwestern Ontario, Canada, a long-term, whole-lake experiment was conducted using a before-after-control-impact design to determine both direct and indirect effects of the synthetic oestrogen used in the birth control pill, 17α-ethynyloestradiol (EE2). Algal, microbial, zooplankton and benthic invertebrate communities showed no declines in abundance during three summers of EE2 additions (5–6 ng l−1), indicating no direct toxic effects. Recruitment of fathead minnow (Pimephales promelas) failed, leading to a near-extirpation of this species both 2 years during (young-of-year, YOY) and 2 years following (adults and YOY) EE2 additions. Body condition of male lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) and male and female white sucker (Catostomus commersonii) declined before changes in prey abundance, suggesting direct effects of EE2 on this endpoint. Evidence of indirect effects of EE2 was also observed. Increases in zooplankton, Chaoborus, and emerging insects were observed after 2 or 3 years of EE2 additions, strongly suggesting indirect effects mediated through the reduced abundance of several small-bodied fishes. Biomass of top predator lake trout declined by 23–42% during and after EE2 additions, most probably an indirect effect from the loss of its prey species, the fathead minnow and slimy sculpin (Cottus cognatus). Our results demonstrate that small-scale studies focusing solely on direct effects are likely to underestimate the true environmental impacts of oestrogens in municipal wastewaters and provide further evidence of the value of whole-ecosystem experiments for understanding indirect effects of EDCs and other aquatic stressors.
Journal Article
Decline of young-of-year walleye (Sander vitreus) growth due to Bythotrephes impacts predicted from bioenergetic principles
2023
Invasive species are a major threat to ecosystem structure and function. For example, Bythotrephes cederströmii (Bythotrephes hereafter) invasions have significantly reduced native zooplankton density and biomass, resulting in competitive interactions with zooplanktivorous fishes. Young of year (YOY) walleye (Sander vitreus) are initially zooplanktivorous and have recently been shown to display reduced growth in Bythotrephes-invaded lakes. Here, we combined a bioenergetics model for larval walleye with changes in the zooplankton community following Bythotrephes invasion and predicted reduced larval walleye growth in the presence of Bythotrephes, supporting field observations. The model predicted greater negative impacts on larval walleye growth in oligotrophic compared with mesotrophic lakes, though reduced growth was only significant under oligotrophic conditions. Under Bythotrephes invasion, net energy available to growth over the simulated period was often observed to be negative (indicating mass loss). These combined results from the model suggest that Bythotrephes invasion could potentially lead to walleye recruitment failure, especially in low nutrient environments. This result was insensitive to differences in annual mean water temperatures ranging from 18.5 to 23.5 °C. As YOY growth, survival, and recruitment are ultimately linked to adult abundance and sustainability of managed stocks, our results highlight the potential impacts of Bythotrephes on the sustainability of walleye populations in boreal lakes.
Journal Article
Life at the top
by
Cruz-Font, Liset
,
Rennie, Michael D.
,
Minns, C. Ken
in
Acceleration
,
acceleration telemetry
,
Accessibility
2019
We used acoustic telemetry and acceleration sensors to compare population‐specific measures of the metabolic costs of an apex fish predator living in four separate lakes. We chose our study species and populations to provide a strong test of recent theoretical predictions that optimal foraging by an apex fish predator in a typical aquatic environment would be consistent with feeding to satiation rather than continuous feeding. We chose four populations where the primary prey type differed along a body size gradient (from small invertebrates to large planktivorous fish) and along a thermal accessibility gradient (from easily accessible cold‐water pelagic prey to less accessible warm‐water epilimnetic and littoral prey). We expected that these gradients in prey type would evoke distinctly different activity gradients depending on whether predators fed to satiation (e.g., less frequent “rest” detections where primary prey are smaller/less accessible) or fed continuously (e.g., fixed level of “rest” detections under all prey conditions). Our study organism was a fall spawning, cold‐water visual apex predator (lake trout). Therefore, we focused our study on diel (early night, dawn, day, dusk, late night) changes in metabolic costs associated with summer feeding behaviour. The duration (~20 days) and fine temporal scale (~30 min) of our behavioural data provided a uniquely detailed picture of intra‐ and inter‐population differences in activity patterns over a critical period in the annual growing season. In all populations, diel shifts in activity were qualitatively consistent with that expected of a visual predator (e.g., resting state detections were most frequent at night). Between‐lake differences in daytime thermal experience were qualitatively consistent with between‐lake differences in the location of primary prey (e.g., excursions to warm habitats were common in lakes with epilimnetic/littoral fish as primary prey and relatively rare in lakes with pelagic cold‐water invertebrates/fish as primary prey). Daytime activity patterns were more consistent with the feeding pattern expected from feeding to satiation rather than continuous feeding: (a) individuals in all four populations exhibited clearly delineated bouts of resting behaviour and active behaviour; (b) the frequency of resting bouts and the resultant overall cost of daily activity were strongly associated with the size and accessibility of prey—in lakes with smaller and/or less accessible prey, predators rested less frequently, exhibited marginally higher costs when active and had higher overall daytime activity costs. Within each lake, similar changes in activity occurred concurrently with diel changes in prey accessibility/relative density. Using a relatively new technology, this paper empirically supports important theories regarding the foraging activity of a top predator fish living in typical freshwater systems. The feeding pattern of this predator was more consistent with a feeding pattern expected from feeding to satiation rather than the pattern expected from continuous feeding.
Journal Article
A synthesis of senescence predictions for indeterminate growth, and support from multiple tests in wild lake trout
2022
Senescence—the deterioration of functionality with age—varies widely across taxa in pattern and rate. Insights into why and how this variation occurs are hindered by the predominance of laboratory-focused research on short-lived model species with determinate growth. We synthesize evolutionary theories of senescence, highlight key information gaps and clarify predictions for species with low mortality and variable degrees of indeterminate growth. Lake trout are an ideal species to evaluate predictions in the wild. We monitored individual males from two populations (1976–2017) longitudinally for changes in adult mortality (actuarial senescence) and body condition (proxy for energy balance). A cross-sectional approach (2017) compared young (ages 4–10 years) and old (18–37 years) adults for (i) phenotypic performance in body condition, and semen quality—which is related to fertility under sperm competition (reproductive senescence)—and (ii) relative telomere length (potential proxy for cellular senescence). Adult growth in these particular populations is constrained by a simplified foodweb, and our data support predictions of negligible senescence when maximum size is only slightly larger than maturation size. Negative senescence (aka reverse senescence) may occur in other lake trout populations where diet shifts allow maximum sizes to greatly exceed maturation size.
Journal Article
Wintertime Simulations of a Boreal Lake with the Canadian Small Lake Model
by
Fortin, Vincent
,
Rennie, Michael D.
,
Mackay, Murray D.
in
Blowing snow
,
Climate change
,
Computer simulation
2017
A one-dimensional mixed layer dynamic lake model is enhanced with snow and ice physics for an examination of processes governing ice cover and phenology in a small boreal lake. The complete snowpack physics module of the Canadian Land Surface Scheme along with a new snow-ice parameterization have been added to the Canadian Small Lake Model, and detailed meteorological and temperature profile data have been acquired for the forcing and evaluation of two wintertime simulations. During the first winter, simulated ice-on and ice-off biases were −3 and −5 days, respectively. In the second winter simulation, ice-on bias was larger, likely due to the absence of a frazil ice scheme in the model, and simulated ice-off was 6 days late, evidently due to insufficient convective mixing beneath the ice in the weeks leading up to ice-off. Ice cover was simulated about 25% too thin between January and March for this year, though late January simulated snow and snow-ice amounts were close to observed. The impact of snow-ice production on simulated ice cover and phenology was found to be dramatic for this lake. In the absence of this process, January snow was more than twice as deep as observed and March ice thickness was less than one-third of that observed. Without snow-ice production, a reasonable simulation of ice cover could only be restored if 62% of snowfall was removed ad hoc (e.g., through blowing snow redistribution)—an excessive amount for a small, sheltered boreal lake.
Journal Article
Spiny water flea invasion alters fish mercury bioaccumulation rates
by
Arnott, Shelley E.
,
Rennie, Michael D.
,
Casselman, John M.
in
Bioaccumulation
,
Biomedical and Life Sciences
,
Bythotrephes
2024
Bythotrephes cederströemi
are a predatory cladoceran zooplankter that have invaded numerous inland lakes in North America, many of which are stratified and support offshore fishes like Cisco (
Coregonus artedi
). While changes in zooplankton community composition following
Bythotrephes
invasion predict an increase in Cisco mercury concentrations (Hg), this phenomenon was not detected from a survey evaluating temporal changes in Cisco Hg across a broad range of lakes varying in the presence or absence of
Bythotrephes
. Here, we compare temporal changes in Cisco bioaccumulation slopes (i.e., slopes of relationships between Cisco Hg and trophic position) from lakes experiencing
Bythotrephes
invasion over the study period to those already invaded (as a reference) over similar time periods. Our results show that bioaccumulation slopes after
Bythotrephes
invasion either changed direction entirely (from positive to negative relationships) or decreased in elevation relative to those prior to invasion. No such pattern was observed in previously invaded reference lakes. Reductions in Cisco bioaccumulation slopes and/or intercepts following
Bythotrephes
invasion suggest that conversion efficiency (and therefore growth) of Cisco increased after invasion (i.e., less Hg accumulates in fish at an equivalent trophic position after vs. before invasion). Back-calculated Cisco growth rates and size-at-age from a second complimentary study were greater in the presence of
Bythotrephes
than without, further supporting the hypothesis that changes in Hg bioaccumulation are likely due to increased conversion efficiency among invaded populations. These findings highlight the potential importance of foraging energetics over and above shifts in trophic position in modifying fish contaminant concentrations.
Journal Article
Resource switching in fish following a major food web disruption
by
Johnson, Timothy B.
,
Rennie, Michael D.
,
Sprules, W. Gary
in
Agnatha. Pisces
,
analysis
,
Animal and plant ecology
2009
Dreissenid mussels (Dreissena polymorpha and D. bugensis) have re-engineered Great Lakes ecosystems since their introduction in the late 1980s. Dreissenids can have major indirect impacts on profundal habitats by redirecting nutrients and energy away from pelagic production (which supplies profundal production) and depositing nutrients and energy in the nearshore zones that they occupy. However, strong empirical evidence for the effects of this redirection of resources on fish populations is currently lacking. Here, we report significant shifts in isotopic signatures, depth distribution and diets of a coldwater profundal fish population that are all consistent with a greater reliance on nearshore resources after the establishment of dreissenid mussels in South Bay, Lake Huron. Isotopic signatures of scales collected from 5-year-old lake whitefish (Coregonus clupeaformis) demonstrated remarkable stability over the 50-year period prior to the establishment of dreissenids (1947-1997) and a sudden and significant change in isotopic signatures (3[per thousand] enrichment in δ¹³C and 1[per thousand] depletion in δ¹⁵N) after their establishment (2001-2005). These dramatic shifts in isotopic signatures were accompanied by a coincident shift in the mean depth of capture of lake whitefish towards the nearshore. A comparison of previously unpublished pre-invasion diets of lake whitefish from South Bay with contemporary diets collected between 2002 and 2005 also indicate a greater reliance on nearshore prey after the invasion of dreissenid mussels. This study is the first to report changes in the carbon source available to lake whitefish associated with restructured benthic communities after the appearance of dreissenid mussels. Further, this study contributes to a growing body of work that demonstrates the ecological insights that can be gained through isotopic analysis of archived fish bony tissues in ecosystems that have experienced significant levels of disturbance.
Journal Article
Multi-Level Responses of Yellow Perch (Perca flavescens) to a Whole-Lake Nanosilver Addition Study
by
Xenopoulos, Marguerite A
,
Hayhurst, Lauren D
,
Wallace, Sarah J
in
Antibacterial agents
,
Antiinfectives and antibacterials
,
Aquatic ecosystems
2020
Silver nanoparticles (AgNP) are widely used as antibacterial agents in both commercial products and for industrial applications. As such, AgNP has a high potential for release into freshwater environments. As part of a whole-lake ecosystem experiment to examine the impacts of AgNP exposure at low µg/L concentrations over multiple years, we evaluated biological responses in Yellow Perch (Perca flavescens) before, during, and after AgNP additions to a freshwater lake. Yellow Perch were monitored for responses to in situ AgNP additions at the cellular (suite of biomarkers), individual (growth, prey consumption, and metabolism), and population (abundance and gross prey consumption) scales. At the cellular level, several biomarkers of oxidative stress in liver tissues revealed down-regulation, including decreased mRNA levels of catalase and glutathione peroxidase in Yellow Perch collected during AgNP exposure, and elevated ratios of reduced to oxidized glutathione. At the individual level, Yellow Perch bioenergetic models revealed that prey consumption and total metabolism significantly declined during AgNP additions and remained depressed one year after AgNP addition. At the population level, Yellow Perch densities and gross prey consumption declined after AgNP was added to the lake. Together, these results reveal a holistic assessment of the negative impacts of chronic exposure to environmentally relevant AgNP concentrations (i.e., µg/L) on Yellow Perch at cellular, individual, and population levels.
Journal Article