The biota of aquatic systems are integrators of overall habitat quality, revealing both episodic as well as cumulative disturbance, and therefore are able to serve as natural monitors of thc systems they inhabit. Invertebrate communities from three relatively pristine coastal wetlands located along the northern shore of Lake Huron were compared to those from three relatively impacted Saginaw Bay coastal wetlands in Lake Huron to identify components of the community that could ordinate wetlands according to anthropogenic disturbance. A total of 24 potential metrics were examined for each of four vegetation zones at the study sites. Of these, 14 successfully discriminated between sites and were used to generate a preliminary index of biotic integrity (IBI) tbr Lake Huron coastal wetlands. This IBI was then tested by assessing coastal wetlands, including five additional sites, based on invertebrate data collected the following year. The preliminary IBI seemed to provide an accurate depiction of the wetlands used to generate the IBI as well as the five additional wetlands. We do not recommend use of the presented IBI as the definitive assessment tool for Lake Huron coastal wetlands. Instead, we suggest that it be tested further on a series of wetlands with known degrees of anthropogenic disturbance.
Inhibition of snail reproductive activity by larval trematodes often results in increased growth of the snail, termed gigantism, during which the snail is hypothesized to allocate excess energy normally used for reproduction to somatic growth. Using the planorbid snail Helisoma anceps and the hemiurid trematode Halipegus occidualis, this hypothesis was examined by raising snails on low and high quality diets under 3 infection conditions: uninfected (UNI) and infected prior to (IPR) and after (IAR) reproductive maturity. Snails exhibited gigantism as an increase in wet mass only in the IPR condition on a high quality diet; snails in the IAR condition were not significantly different in size from UNI controls. Throughout the experiment, snails raised on a high quality diet were larger than those on the low quality diet, regardless of infection status, primarily because of increased growth rates prior to the onset of reproduction. Egg production by UNI snails on the high quality diet was 20 times higher than snails on the low diet, even though diet quality only differed by a factor of 4, and infected snails (both IPR and IAR) showed significantly reduced reproductive activity compared to UNI controls. The number of cercariae shed by each snail on a daily basis was not significantly different between IPR and IAR conditions when each diet quality was examined separately; more cercariae were produced by snails raised on the high quality diet. The prevalence of infection at the end of the experiment was lowest among snails raised on the low quality diet, suggesting the diet, i.e., energy intake, influences the loss of infections. Snail mortality did not differ among the various treatment conditions. These data suggest that gigantism is dependent upon snail reproductive maturity at the time of infection and food quality, and comparison to growth rates and fecundity data from previous field studies indicates that H. anceps in the field are probably protein deprived. Gigantism does not appear to be adaptive for the snail because survival was not increased, or for the parasite because cercariae production was the same for snails exhibiting gigantism or not. These results also stress the need for caution when examining the fecundity and growth rates of both uninfected and infected snails in the laboratory, especially when comparing these data to other laboratory or field studies.
Stagnicola emarginata were collected from 3 northern Michigan lakes and examined for larval trematode infections. The structure of the trematode community was then compared with 2 previous studies conducted on Douglas Lake in order to determine what changes had taken place over a period of more than 50 yr and to examine the possibility of using trematodes as bioindicators of environmental quality. Species richness was reduced by half (from 16 to 8 species) from the first study conducted in 1936, along with a decrease in the overall prevalence from 61% to 13%. No new species had colonized the lake, and the same 8 trematodes were also the only species found in 2 other lakes. The decline in prevalence was most severe in trematodes that used gulls as definitive hosts, whereas species that used ducks as hosts increased slightly. The decrease in species richness and prevalence of infection over time may reflect increasing human impacts on lakes. However, because of patchy host distributions, the use of larval trematodes as bioindicators of environmental change requires further investigation.
The formerly endangered Kirtland's warbler (Setophaga kirtlandii) is among a growing number of conservation‐reliant species that depend on active management to avoid reverting to endangered status. Because the Kirtland's warbler is a habitat specialist of young, even‐aged jack pine (Pinus banksiana), managers of the recovery effort stressed creating new jack pine stands and monitoring numbers of singing males through an annual census using single visits to individual stands. Kirtland's warbler will occupy and breed in red pine (P. resinosa), but red pine has not been surveyed for Kirtland's warblers in the annual population census. Furthermore, the current monitoring approach cannot determine their species detection probability or individual detection probability, which is essential to evaluate both red pine use and the accuracy of the census. From 2016–2018 we estimated density and detection probabilities in jack pine and red pine stands through repeated visits to a limited number of stands rather than single visits to many stands. Estimates of species detection probability indicated that ≥1 male Kirtland's warbler would be detected on most sites when any were present, but individual detection probabilities were less and varied by stand type, indicating that single visits to sites would underestimate numbers and that accurate estimation of detection probability was important for estimation of density in different stand types. We offer quantitative estimates of detection probabilities for determination of Kirtland's warbler population size in jack pine versus red pine stands in the same areas and breeding seasons. Managers of Kirtland's warblers should incorporate detection probabilities into population surveys to achieve more accurate estimates of population size.
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