“…First, recruitment variation of most ecologically and economically important fish populations, including walleye (Mion et al 1998, Roseman 2000 ), appears to be regulated by early life growth and survival. Second, the physical (e.g., wind-driven water circulation, upwelling; Hjort 1914, Lasker 1981, Iles and Sinclair 1982Hjort 1914, Cushing 1990, Carreon-Martinez et al 2014 processes that control early life growth and survival oftentimes are heterogeneous in both space and time (Houde 2008, 2009. In turn, the progeny of spawning stocks that are spatially and (or) temporally segregated would be expected to be strongly regulated by different (localized) processes, resulting in uncorrelated (i.e., asynchronous) recruitment.…”