Item talk:Q160739
Quantifying the Impacts of Climate Change on Fish Growth and Production to Enable Sustainable Management of Diverse Inland Fisheries
Fisheries managers in Midwestern lakes and reservoirs are tasked with balancing multiple management objectives to help maintain healthy fish populations across a landscape of diverse lakes. As part of this, managers monitor fish growth and survival. Growth rates in particular are indicators of population health, and directly influence the effectiveness of regulations designed to protect spawning fish or to promote trophy fishing opportunities. Growth, combined with reproduction and survival, also determines the amount of fish biomass available for harvest, known as population production. Changing water temperatures can influence growth and production of managed fish species in multiple complex ways, increasing the opportunity for harvest in certain locations and decreasing it in others. In this project, researchers will quantify how climate change influences growth and productivity of priority fish species in lakes and reservoirs throughout the Midwest. This information will enable managers to adapt management objectives to take advantage of increased growth and harvest potential in certain places, while implementing protective actions where climate change is likely to have negative effects. Such work is particularly important given that climate change impacts on fish populations are often indirect, influencing species interactions, growth rates, and recruitment in ways that are often counterintuitive and vary across the landscape. This study builds upon previous advances in lake temperature modeling and ongoing work to estimate water temperature and its effects on managed fish abundance in upper Midwestern lakes by expanding the work to southern Midwestern reservoirs, and by partnering with fishery managers in Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa, Missouri, and the Laurentian Great Lakes to link changes in lake temperatures to key management metrics related to fish size and harvest.