CEE LAB
  1. CEE LAB
  2. Publications
  3. 10. Changes in fish condition and mercury vary by region, not Bythotrephes invasion: A result of climate change?

Related Publications

 
87. Darkening waters: climate-induced shifts in precipitation and DOM reduced phytoplankton but not zooplankton in boreal lakes
 
86. Environmental and food web determinants of Lake Trout mercury concentrations in Ontario lakes
 
71. Spiny water flea invasion alters fish mercury biomagnification rates
 
68. Intra- and interlake comparisons of select fishes in the Laurentian Great Lakes using morphometry, stable isotopes, and mercury
 
66. Decline of young-of-year walleye (<i>Sander vitreus</i>) growth due to <i>Bythotrephes</i> impacts predicted from bioenergetic principles
 
61. Mercury methylation and methylmercury demethylation in boreal lake sediment with legacy sulphate pollution
 
56. Hiding in plain sight: Combining field naturalist observations and herbarium records to reveal phenological change
 
53. Broad-scale assessment of groundhog (<i>Marmota monax</i>) predictions of spring onset no better than chance
 
41. Behavioral responses to annual temperature variation alter the dominant energy pathway, growth, and condition of a cold-water predator
 
38. Broad shifts in the resource use of a commercially harvested fish following the invasion of dreissenid mussels
 
29. Apparent extirpation of prey fish communities in lakes following northern pike (<em>Esox lucius</em>) introduction
 
24. Context-dependent changes in lake whitefish populations associated with dreissenid invasion (book chapter)
 
13. <em>Bythotrephes</em> invasion elevates trophic position of zooplankton and fish: implications for contaminant biomagnification
 
9. Factors affecting the growth and condition of lake whitefish (<em>Coregonus clupeaformis</em>)
 
8. Changes in nearshore zooplankton communities associated with species invasions and potential effects on larval lake whitefish (<em>Coregonus clupeaformis</em>)
 
3. Predictive models of benthic invertebrate methylmercury in Ontario and Québec lakes