"Wild Age-0 Salmonid Abundance and Outmigration in Wisconsin Tributaries to Lake Michigan"

Monday, August 22, 2016
Eric Wegleitner , Fisheries Analysis Center, Wisconsin Cooperative Fishery Research Unit, Stevens Point, WI
Daniel Isermann , College of Natural Resources, UWSP, U.S. Geological Survey, Wisconsin Cooperative Fisheries Research Unit, Stevens Point, WI
Janice Kerns , College of Natural Resources, UWSP, Wisconsin Cooperative Fishery Research Unit, Stevens Point, WI
Introduced salmonids (i.e., chinook and Coho salmon, rainbow and brown trout) support important recreational fisheries within the Lake Michigan ecosystem. These fisheries are primarily supported by stocking. However, some natural reproduction is known to occur within some tributary systems. Specifically, anadromous rainbow trout (i.e., steelhead) stocked into Lake Michigan are known to exhibit an adfluvial life history, migrating up tributaries for spawning. Wild offspring have been encountered in some of these tributaries, but it is not known whether these fish successfully outmigrate from these streams into larger tributaries or Lake Michigan. The primary objectives of our research are to determine if: 1) abundance of wild age-0 salmonids (primarily steelhead) varies among selected streams in relation to available habitat; 2) wild age-0 salmonids successfully outmigrate from Wisconsin tributaries into Lake Michigan or into larger tributaries and 3) potential bottlenecks related to stream temperature or annual flow regimes prevent successful outmigration from some streams.