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Morissette, Olivier; Bernatchez, Louis; Wiendenbeck, Michael; Sirois, Pascal 2020-03-04 <p class="Text" style="text-align:justify;"><b>1. </b>The selection of thermal habitat by fish is strongly regulated by physiology and behaviour. However, delineation of a species lifelong thermal niche remains technically challenging. Lake trout (<i>Salvelinus namaycush</i>) survival and productivity are recognised as being tightly linked to a somewhat restricted thermal habitat. The factors guiding temperature selection during each life stage remain poorly understood.</p> <p class="Text" style="text-align:justify;"><b>2.</b> In this study, we tested the significant factors controlling the realised thermal niche of lake trout from two southern Quebec small boreal lakes that experienced supplementation stocking during the last 20 years. We used oxygen stable isotope (δ<sup>18</sup>O) thermometry of otolith calcium carbonates (aragonite) using secondary-ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) to estimate experienced lifelong temperatures. We investigated the thermal habitat of lake trout with known genotypes (local, hybrid and stocked).</p> <p class="Text" style="text-align:justify;"><b>3</b>. Ontogeny and genetic origin influenced temperature selection in both studied lake trout populations. Young-of-the-year consistently used warmer, shallower habitats (10.7 ± 2.6°C, 7.5 m depth) prior to a juvenile transition to colder and deeper waters (8.5 ± 3.3°C, 10 m depth). Stocked lake trout, originating from a genetically distinct ecotype, exhibited a more variable thermal niche, with some individuals consistently using warmer habitat (10.4 ± 1°C) than local fish. Their hybrid progeny also occupied a warmer thermal niche, intermediate to the parental strains. We propose that increased fat content and genetic origin are potential explanatory factors for warmer temperature use.</p> <p><b>4</b>. This study reiterates that high-resolution otolith δ<sup>18</sup>O thermometry is a uniquely well-suited approach for unravelling the multiple factors that influence lifelong temperature selection in fish. Our results illustrate that the realised thermal niche is influenced by a genetic-environment interaction.</p>
Dataverse de l'Université du Québec à Chicoutimi Translation missing: fr.blacklight.search.logo
Borealis
Morissette, Olivier 2024-05-10 This dataset contain the raw data used in the realization of the analysis linked to the following article: Mr. William Fortin, Prof. Olivier Morissette, Dr. Serge Lavoie, Dr. Marc Mingelbier, and Dr. Pascal Sirois. Matching the elemental fingerprints of fish otoliths with water masses of the St. Lawrence River and its tributaries, Canada. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences. https://doi.org/10.1139/cjfas-2023-0097
Dataverse de l'Université du Québec à Chicoutimi Translation missing: fr.blacklight.search.logo
Borealis
Morissette, Olivier; Trueman, Clive N.; Sturrock, Anna M.; Geffen, Audrey; Shirai, Kotaro 2023-04-26 This dataset provide all replication data and R code for the article "Limited evidence for species-specific sensitivity of temperature-dependent fractionation of oxygen stable isotope in biominerals: a meta-analysis" pubished in Methods in Ecology and Evolution under the DOI XXXX. Raw figures and supplementary material associated with the article are also available in the dataset.
Université de Montréal Dataverse Translation missing: fr.blacklight.search.logo
Borealis
Beisner, Beatrix E.; Rodriguez, Marco; Lemaire, Marine; Fugère, Vincent; Barrette, Marie-France; Gagné, Stéphanie; Leclerc, Véronique; Morissette, Olivier; Pouliot, Rémy; St-Pierre, Annick; Turgeon, Katrine; Velghe, Katherine; Guay, Jean-Christophe 2024-09-03 The data covers sampling sites over all of the province of Québec, with more data in the southern regions of the province. Data are from Hydro-Québec and the Québec Ministère de l’Environnement, de la Lutte contre les changements climatiques, de la Faune et des Parcs (MELCCFP). These datasets include a heterogeneous mix of standardized and non-standardized fish surveys by government biologists and by environmental consulting firms sub-contracted by Hydro-Québec, collected between 1973 and 2021. Overall, 6498 unique sites (3087 sites in lakes, 3412 sites in rivers; reservoirs excluded), were included in the database. For each site, the data consisted of species counts (adult and juvenile life stages), location (latitude and longitude), sampling date, habitat type (lake or river) and fishing gear (three categories: electrofishing, gillnet, or seine). Climate data (means over 1970 to 2000) and elevation were extracted for each site according to the site’s location from the WorldClim website (https://www.worldclim.org/) in 2023; a site which provides global weather and climate data at high spatial resolution. All 19 ‘bioclimatic variables’ provided by WorldClim were obtained from WorldClim raster files (10-min. resolution) using the function extract from the package raster (Hijmans and van Etten 2012). Five weakly-correlated bioclimatic variables were retained: annual means for temperature and precipitation, mean diurnal temperature range, annual temperature range, and precipitation seasonality (coefficient of variation of monthly total precipitation).
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Dryad
Morissette, Olivier; Sirois, Pascal; Lester, Nigel P.; Wilson, Chris C.; Bernatchez, Louis 2019-07-05 Supplementation stocking is a commonly used management tool to sustain exploited fish populations. Possible negative consequences of supplementation on local stocks are a concern for the conservation of wild fish populations. However, the direct impacts of supplementation on life history traits of local populations have rarely been investigated. In addition, intraspecific hybridization between contrasting ecotypes (planktivorous and piscivorous) has been seldom considered in supplementation plans. Here, we combined genetic (genotype-by-sequencing analysis) and life history traits to document the effects of supplementation on maximum length, growth rates, body condition and genetic admixture in stocked populations of two Lake Trout ecotypes from small boreal lakes in Quebec and Ontario, Canada. In both ecotypes, the length of stocked individuals was greater than local individuals and, in planktivorous-stocked populations, most stocked fish exhibited a planktivorous-like growth while 20% of fish exhibited piscivorous-like growth. The body condition index was positively related to the proportion of local genetic background, but this pattern was only observed in stocked planktivorous populations. We conclude that interactions and hybridization between contrasting ecotypes is a risk that could result in deleterious impacts and possible outbreeding depression. We discuss the implications of these findings for supplementation stocking.

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