Atypical swimbladders of lake charr, Salvelinus namaycush, from Great Slave Lake, Northwest Territories, Canada

October 31, 2007 - Randy L. Eshenroder; E. Don Stevens; Mara S. Zimmerman; Charles C. Krueger

Journal or Book Title: Environmental Biology of Fishes

Keywords: Buoyancy; Morphotype; Lake trout; Humper; Siscowet

Volume/Issue: 83

Page Number(s): 91-98

Year Published: 2008

<p></p><div>Swimbladder walls of lake charr, Salvelinus&nbsp;namaycush, from Great Slave Lake (GSL), Northwest&nbsp;Territories, Canada, were unusually thick for the&nbsp;species. The thinnest sections of the GSL bladders&nbsp;(mean = 2.44mm, range = 1.1–4.4mm) were significantly&nbsp;<span style="line-height: 1.5em;">thicker (P = 0.001) than lake charr swimbladders&nbsp;collected from two small Province of Ontario lakes&nbsp;(means = 0.65 and 0.92mm), whose populations were&nbsp;assumed to be representative of the species. Variance in&nbsp;wall thickness was also greater in GSL lake charr than&nbsp;in charr from two small lakes (P &lt; 0.02). Within&nbsp;individuals, some of the GSL bladder walls were&nbsp;markedly irregular in thickness, but whether these&nbsp;anomalies exist in situ or were artifacts of preservation&nbsp;remains uncertain. The bulk of the tissue in the thickest&nbsp;sections of the GSL swimbladders was in the tunica&nbsp;serosa (outer layer). The extent of the modification of&nbsp;</span><span style="line-height: 1.5em;">the GSL swimbladders is extraordinary for northern&nbsp;fishes in postglacial lakes.</span></div><p></p>

DOI: 10.1007/s10641-007-9287-5

Type of Publication: Journal Article

Publisher: Springer Science+Business Media


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