The Great Lakes Fishery Commission (GLFC) is considering greater use of low‐head barrier dams on stream tributaries of the Laurentian Great Lakes to control populations of sea lampreys Petromyzon marinus. The impact of these barriers on nontarget fishes is not known. A mark–recapture study on four Lake Ontario streams examined movements of fishes in streams with (barrier) and without (reference) low‐head barriers. A significantly lower proportion of fishes moved across a real barrier on barrier streams than across a hypothetical barrier on reference streams (0.15 versus 0.50, respectively). The impact of the barriers on movement was more pronounced in spring and fall than in summer. However, the likelihood of fishes moving versus not moving between sample segments on either side of a barrier location (but not across the barrier) did not differ significantly between barrier and reference streams. The upstream (longitudinal) decline in species richness was greater for barrier streams than for reference streams in each season. At both interspecific and intraspecific levels, mean total lengths of fish traversing real barriers were significantly greater than the mean total lengths of fish traversing hypothetical barriers. Our findings demonstrate that low‐head barriers restrict the movements of some fishes and suggest this restriction affects assemblage structure above the barrier.
Low-head barriers used in the control of parasitic sea lamprey (Petromyzon marinus) in the basin of the Laurentian Great Lakes can alter the richness and composition of nontarget fishes in tributary streams. Identification of taxa sensitive to these barriers is an important step toward mitigating these effects. Upstreamdownstream distributions of fishes in 24 pairs of barrier and reference streams from throughout the basin were estimated using electrofishing surveys. For 48 common species from 34 genera and 12 taxonomic families, 819 species, 516 genera, and 27 families showed evidence of being sensitive to barriers, with the variation in number depending on the statistical measure applied. Barriers did not differentially affect species from certain genera or families, nor did they affect species of certain body form. Therefore, taxonomic affiliation and swimming morphology are not useful for predicting sensitivity to barriers for fishes that co-occurred with sea lampreys but were not sampled adequately by our survey. Our estimates of sensitivity will help fisheries managers make sound, defensible decisions regarding the construction, modification (for fish passage), and removal of small, in-stream barriers.
Background Obstructive sleep apnea ( OSA ) is present in 60% to 70% of stroke patients. Cerebral vasoreactivity in patients with stroke and OSA has not been well studied and could identify a new pathophysiologic mechanism with potential therapeutic intervention. We aimed to determine whether risk categories for OSA are associated with cerebral vasoreactivity in stroke patients. Methods and Results In this cross‐sectional study of a cohort of patients with stroke, we used clinical questionnaires (Sleep Obstructive Apnea Score Optimized for Stroke [ SOS ] and snoring, tiredness, observed, pressure, bmi, age, neck, gender [ STOP ‐ BANG ] scores) to assess the risk of OSA and transcranial Doppler to assess cerebral vasoreactivity (breath‐holding index and visual evoked flow velocity response). Of the 99 patients included, 77 (78%) had medium or high risk of OSA and 80 performed transcranial Doppler. Mean breath‐holding index was 0.52±0.37, and median visual evoked flow velocity response was 10.8% (interquartile range: 8.8–14.5); 54 of 78 (69%) showed impaired anterior circulation vasoreactivity (breath‐holding index <0.69) and 53 of 71 (75%) showed impaired posterior circulation vasoreactivity (visual evoked flow velocity response ≤14.0%). There was a significant negative correlation between the risk of OSA calculated by STOP ‐ BANG and the breath‐holding index ( r S =−0.284, P =0.012). The following variables were associated with low anterior circulation vasoreactivity: dyslipidemia (odds ratio: 4.7; 95% CI , 1.5–14.2) and STOP ‐ BANG score (odds ratio: 1.7 per 1‐point increase; 95% CI , 1.1–1.5). Conclusions A high risk of OSA and impaired vasoreactivity exists in the population that has had stroke. Dyslipidemia and STOP ‐ BANG sleep apnea risk categories were independently associated with impaired anterior circulation vasoreactivity.
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