An international ship crew presented for medical care in Saint John, New Brunswick, following rapid onset of gastrointestinal and in some cases neurological and cardiac symptoms after a common fish meal. Ciguatera poisoning was identified as the cause of illness. This report describes the public health investigation and management of this incident, including collaboration between the implicated provincial and federal authorities.
Catch-at-age data are used to inform important management decisions for recovering populations of Lake Trout Salvelinus namaycush. Age data for Lake Trout are commonly derived from interpretation of annual growth marks (annuli) on the fish's otoliths. Due to the tendency for annuli to vary in appearance and the subjectivity that is inherent to any age interpretation method, it is important that the common sources of interpretation error be well understood for any aging method used to inform management plans. In this study, coded wire tags were used to establish true ages for 153 Lake Trout to measure the precision and accuracy of age interpretations made from transverse-sectioned otoliths and to identify sources of potential age interpretation error that researchers and managers may encounter when using this method. Precision of age interpretations, as measured by average coefficient of variation, ranged from 7.9% to 9.2%. Accuracy of age interpretations varied among readers, with exact matches ranging from 41.8% to 53.6% and accuracy within AE1 year ranging from 81.0% to 83.0%. Age interpretation errors were more likely to be overestimates of true age for Lake Trout under age 7 and underestimates for Lake Trout over age 13. However, only reader 1 exhibited significant systematic bias in their age interpretations. Poor clarity of the first annuli, growth checks resembling annuli, and faintness of narrow annuli near otolith margins in older fish were identified as likely sources of interpretation error in this study. A digital reference collection of known-age Lake Trout otoliths is provided as supplemental material in the online version of this article. This collection can be used for training new readers, measuring the accuracy of age interpretations, and monitoring for aging bias by anyone using otoliths to obtain age data for Lake Trout.
Kinship-based methods of population assessment such as close-kin mark-recapture require accurate and efficient genotyping methods capable of resolving complex relationships among kin. Inference of such relationships can be difficult using biallelic loci due to the large number of markers required to obtain the necessary power.
Natural range expansions in warm-water freshwater fishes are currently not well understood, but shifts in native species distributions can be influenced by many factors, including habitat restoration or degradation and climate change. Here, we provide empirical evidence of range expansions observed in two native freshwater fish species in Lake Erie: the Spotted Gar (Lepisosteus oculatus) and Spotted Sucker (Minytrema melanops). We confirmed our field identifications ofL. oculatusandM. melanopsusing mtDNA barcoding. Maximum likelihood phylogenetic analyses reveal that our samples confidently resolve in theL. oculatusandM. melanopsclades respectively, with additional identification support from BLAST searches. Notably, we found no correlation between the increased detection rate of both species and an increase in sampling effort when compared to previous records. Historically, eastern Lake Erie experienced habitat degradation through channelization, siltation, dredging, and toxification of sediments. We hypothesize that recent habitat remediation efforts have provided suitable habitat for both species to recolonize shallow waters with densely vegetated habitat (>90% substrate coverage). Both species are likely to continue their northern expansion as habitats are restored and climatic changes favor warm-water fishes.
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