We have conducted a behavioral study of YOY largemouth bass from northern and southern systems and found that northern fish are considerably more active and consume more (when fed ad lib) than southern counterparts. We are planning to put this into the context of mortality- growth rate trade-offs by developing a predation index across latitudes. To do this we need estimates of absolute biomass of potential predators in northern and southern systems. A literature review indicates that there is some data from cove rotenone studies especially in southern systems, but we have found precious little on absolute biomass estimates of predators in northern systems (preferably from northern US and Canada - the limit of LMB distribution). We will like to take these data, couple it with temperature data, size frequency distributions of these predators, size of YOY LMB, and percentage of fish in predator diets to get a first cut at risk across latitudes.
If you are aware of grey literature (reports, state documents) or older refereed literature containing these data (especially absolute biomass of predators), I would appreciate hearing from you.
Thanks.
Jeff Miner
-- Jeffrey G. Miner, Ph.D. Associate Professor Aquatic Ecology and Fisheries Laboratory Coordinator, Ecology-Ethology Research Station Graduate Program in Ecology, Evolution, and Conservation Biology Department of Biological Sciences Bowling Green State University Bowling Green, OH 43403 USA (419) 372-8330 Fax: (419) 372-2024 [log in to unmask] http://www.bgsu.edu/departments/biology/
"First they ignore you. Then they laugh at you. Then they fight you. Then you win."
Gandhi
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