Th-118-6
Age, Growth, and Size of Lake Superior Pygmy Whitefish Prosopium coulterii

Taylor R. Stewart , Great Lakes Science Center - Lake Erie Biological Station, U.S. Geological Survey, Sandusky, OH
Derek H. Ogle , Mathematical Sciences & Natural Resources, Northland College, Ashland, WI
Owen T. Gorman , Great Lakes Science Center - Lake Superior Biological Station, U.S. Geological Survey, Ashland, WI
Mark R. Vinson , Great Lakes Science Center - Lake Superior Biological Station, U.S. Geological Survey, Ashland, WI
Pygmy Whitefish (Prosopium coulterii) are a small, glacial relict species with a disjunct distribution in North America and Siberia.  In 2013, we collected Pygmy Whitefish at 28 stations from throughout Lake Superior.  Total length, weight, sex, and maturity were recorded for all fish; scales and otoliths were collected from a subsample of fish.  We compared the precision of estimated ages between readers and between scales and otoliths, estimated von Bertalanffy growth parameters for male and female Pygmy Whitefish, and reported the first weight-length relationship for Pygmy Whitefish.  Age estimates between scales and otoliths differed significantly (P < 0.001), with otolith ages significantly greater for most ages after age-3.  Maximum otolith age was nine for females and seven for males, which is older than previously reported for Pygmy Whitefish from Lake Superior.  Growth was initially fast but slowed considerably after age-3 for males and age-4 for females, falling to 3-4 mm per year at maximum estimated ages.  Females were longer than males after age-3.  Our results suggest the size, age, and growth of Pygmy Whitefish in Lake Superior have not changed appreciably since 1953.