TY - GEN
T1 - Asian Carp Early Life History and Reproduction in the Upper Mississippi River
AU - Lamer, James
N1 - American Fisheries Society & The Wildlife Society 2019 Joint Annual Conference, Sept. 27-Oct. 4, 2019, Reno, NV
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - Bighead Carp and Silver Carp reproduction in the Mississippi River system has been evident since the 1990’s and despite the wealth of research devoted to their life history, dynamics contributing to their early life history and spawning behavior are still not well understood. The complementary design and synthesis of independent agency research and monitoring provides a comprehensive insight into Asian carp production and early life history. The multi-agency collaborative assessment provides location of spawning activity (egg trawls, YOY otolith microchemistry, telemetry), frequency of spawns (egg trawls, larval light trapping, otolith microstructure, histological evidence, spawning patches and year class strength observed through contracted removal), and magnitude of individual spawns (larval light trapping, YOY sampling, year class strength). These collective efforts identified tributary contributions to production, identified up to 7-8 unique spawning events in 2016, contributed to identification of hydrological triggers correlated with spawning behavior, and identified factors contributing to YOY success. This research and collaboration demonstrates the value of multi-agency partnerships to address complex issues in invasion biology.
AB - Bighead Carp and Silver Carp reproduction in the Mississippi River system has been evident since the 1990’s and despite the wealth of research devoted to their life history, dynamics contributing to their early life history and spawning behavior are still not well understood. The complementary design and synthesis of independent agency research and monitoring provides a comprehensive insight into Asian carp production and early life history. The multi-agency collaborative assessment provides location of spawning activity (egg trawls, YOY otolith microchemistry, telemetry), frequency of spawns (egg trawls, larval light trapping, otolith microstructure, histological evidence, spawning patches and year class strength observed through contracted removal), and magnitude of individual spawns (larval light trapping, YOY sampling, year class strength). These collective efforts identified tributary contributions to production, identified up to 7-8 unique spawning events in 2016, contributed to identification of hydrological triggers correlated with spawning behavior, and identified factors contributing to YOY success. This research and collaboration demonstrates the value of multi-agency partnerships to address complex issues in invasion biology.
KW - INHS
UR - https://afs.confex.com/afs/2019/meetingapp.cgi/Paper/40604
M3 - Conference contribution
BT - American Fisheries Society & The Wildlife Society 2019 Joint Annual Conference, Sept. 27-Oct. 4, 2019, Reno, NV
ER -