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Status and trends in the Lake Superior fish community, 2023

December 1, 2023

The U.S. Geological Survey annually conducts fishery surveys across Lake Superior that describe trends in fish species occurrence and relative abundance to inform fisheries management and large lake ecology. In 2023, the Lake Superior fish community was sampled with daytime bottom and surface trawls at 51 nearshore locations in June and 31 offshore locations in July. Nearshore bottom trawls collected 157,804 fish from 25 species or morphotypes. Nearshore mean biomass was 18.3 kg per ha which was the second highest biomass estimate over the survey’s 46-year history. Offshore bottom trawls collected 15,458 fish from 10 species or morphotypes. Offshore mean biomass was 5.2 kg per ha, which was less than the annual average of 6.3 kg per ha. Recruitment, as measured by age-1 densities, was the highest recorded for Bloater, Cisco, and Rainbow Smelt in the nearshore and for Kiyi in the offshore survey’s period-of-records. Lakewide average densities (fish per ha) of age-1 fish were 140 for Bloater, 1,019 for Cisco, 616 for Rainbow Smelt, and 54 for Kiyi, which were the highest estimates for the survey’s period-of-record. Period-of-record averages for these species were 10, 67, and 9 age-1 fish per ha, respectively. Age-1 Lake Whitefish averaged 9 fish per ha which was similar to the long-term average of 8 age-1 Lake Whitefish per ha. If the future can be predicted by past large Bloater, Cisco, and Kiyi (collectively, ciscoe) year-class events, the unprecedented survival of the 2022 ciscoe yearclass will influence the Lake Superior ecosystem for the next 10 to 20-years.

Publication Year 2023
Title Status and trends in the Lake Superior fish community, 2023
Authors Mark Vinson, Lori M. Evrard, Owen Gorman, Sydney B Phillips, Daniel Yule
Publication Type Report
Publication Subtype Organization Series
Index ID 70257591
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Great Lakes Science Center
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