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Document Description
Title
Comparative
ecology
of the
brook
trout
(Salvelinus
fontinalis
Mitchill)
in
two
natural
and
one
fertilized
lake
in
central
insular
Newfoundland
Author
Clancy
,
Sean
Richard
,
1971-
Description
Thesis
(M.Sc.)--Memorial
University
of
Newfoundland
,
2001.
Biology
Date
2001
Pagination
xxii, 144 leaves : ill., map
Subject
Brook
trout--Ecology--Newfoundland
and
Labrador
Degree
M.Sc.
Degree Grantor
Memorial University of Newfoundland. Dept. of Biology
Discipline
Biology
Language
eng
Spatial Coverage
Canada--Newfoundland and Labrador
Notes
Bibliography:
leaves
131-138
Abstract
This
study
compares
aspects
of the
feeding
,
physiological
,
population
dynamics
,
ecology
, and the
life
history
of the
brook
trout
,
Salvelinus
fontinalis
Mitchill
in
three
ponds
of the
Experimental
Ponds
Area
(EPA)
,
central
Newfoundland.
Two
of the
ponds
were
natural
control
ecosystems
while
the
third
had been
fertilized
with
nitrogen
and
phosphorus
each
summer
since
1991.
--
Analysis
of
stomach
contents
was
used
to
evaluate
feeding
intensity
and
diet
composition.
Feeding
intensity
generally
decreased
throughout
the
summer.
Brook
trout
were
predominantly
benthic
feeders
and
switched
from a
diet
dominated
by
odonate
nymphs
(Corduliidae)
in the
spring
to
one
composed
of
snails
(Gastropoda)
,
smaller-sized
insect
taxa
(Trichoptera
,
Corixidae)
and
organisms
found
on or
near
the
surface
waters
of the
pond
later
in the
summer
and
early
fall
(Diptera
,
Hymenoptera).
Modest
variation
in the
prey
groups
selected
by
male
and
female
trout
indicated
spatial
differences
where
each
gender
feeds
within
the
lake
ecosystem.
Large
fish
fed
on
larger-sized
prey
taxa
and had a
greater
mean
ration
in
comparison
to
small
fish.
--
Analysis
of
somatic-visceral
percent
lipid
content
was
used
to
document
the
seasonal
change
in
physiological
condition
of
large
,
maturing
male
, and
female
trout.
The
monthly
mean
lipid
content
increased
from
spring
to a
maximum
in
mid-summer
, then
decreased
through
to
fall
for
each
gender.
Lipid
accumulation
coincided
with the
period
when
mean
ration
was
greatest
,
while
lipid
depletion
coincided
with a
decrease
in
feeding
intensity
, an
increase
in
metabolism
inferred
from
higher
water
temperatures
and the
diversion
of
lipid
into
gonadal
mass.
Percent
lipid
content
was
positively
correlated
with
two
indices
of
condition
and
negatively
correlated
with
water
content
which
can
be
used
to
predict
lipid
content.
--
Analysis
of
annual
seasonal
population
census
data
from
1991
to
1996
and
electro-fishing
data
collected
in
1996
facilitated
the
description
of the
life
history
and
growth
characteristics
of
brook
trout
in the
three
ponds.
Young-of-the-year
were
most
predominant
in the
streams
and
cohort
patterns
indicated
trout
enter
the
ponds
at
ages
1+
and
2+.
The
lack
of
older
fish
in the
streams
suggests
that
death
may
be the
principle
source
of
loss
for
pond
fish
aged
2+
and
older.
The
maximum
age
observed
was
age
5+.
Male
trout
matured
at a
smaller
size
and at a
younger
age
, on
average
, than
females;
the
majority
of
reproductive
individuals
were
age
3+.
Female
brook
trout
produced
an
average
of
236
eggs
per
female
with a
mean
egg
diameter
of
3.23
mm.
EPA
brook
trout
displayed
generally
smaller
fork
lengths
at
age
than
fish
in
other
lakes
on the
mainland
and
insular
Newfoundland.
--
Comparison
of the
temporal
change
in the
brook
trout
population
abundance
,
population
structure
and
growth
characteristics
in the
experimental
pond
relative
to the
controls
facilitated
the
investigation
of the
potential
effects
of the
whole-lake
fertilization
experiment.
There was an
increase
in
brook
trout
density
in the
experimental
pond
relative
to the
controls
during
the
fourth
year
of
fertilization
,
consistent
with an
expected
'bottom-up'
response
to
increased
macroinvertebrate
abundance
,
followed
by
increased
mortality
rates
possibly
attributable
to a
'top-down'
impact
by
loons.
Fertilization
appears
not to have
increased
growth
rates
of
fish
in the
experimental
pond
, as
indicated
by the
comparisons
of
age-class
fall
weight
,
however
the
growth
patterns
of
experimental
pond
fish
varied
less
among
individuals
than those of the
control
ponds
across
years.
Type
Text
Resource Type
Electronic
thesis
or
dissertation
Format
Image/jpeg;
Application/pdf
Source
Paper copy kept in the Centre for Newfoundland Studies, Memorial University Libraries
Local Identifier
a1538770
Rights
The author retains copyright ownership and moral rights in this thesis. Neither the thesis nor substantial extracts from it may be printed or otherwise reproduced without the author's permission.
Collection
Electronic
Theses
and
Dissertations
Scanning Status
Completed
PDF File
(16.64
MB)
--
http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/theses/Clancy_SeanRichard.pdf
CONTENTdm file name
40836.cpd