Cisco. Photo courtesy of Ellen George |
February 25, 2019. New York Sea Grant, the Cornell University Department of Natural Resources, The Nature Conservancy,
and the SUNY College at Oswego have published a summary report for a
workshop on “Identifying Research Priorities for Cisco in Lake Ontario.”
More than 30 local, state, and international experts participated in
the workshop. The report is available online at https://seagrant.sunysb.edu/articles/r/12915.
"Efforts to increase native Cisco populations in Lake Ontario will support a more diverse forage base for predators including salmon and trout that draw significant numbers of anglers to Lake Ontario," notes New York Sea Grant Fisheries and Ecosystem Health Specialist Jesse M.Lepak, Ph.D., Oswego, N.Y.
"Efforts to increase native Cisco populations in Lake Ontario will support a more diverse forage base for predators including salmon and trout that draw significant numbers of anglers to Lake Ontario," notes New York Sea Grant Fisheries and Ecosystem Health Specialist Jesse M.Lepak, Ph.D., Oswego, N.Y.
The workshop participants identified critical Cisco research priorities, including the need to:
.
develop fast, accurate, affordable, and field-ready Cisco
identification techniques to differentiate the whitefishes that include
Cisco;
. identify factors, such as weather and predation, that influence Cisco reproductive success; and
. develop a collaborative Lake Ontario-wide assessment strategy for Cisco.
Cisco experts at 2018 workshop. Photo courtesy of Cornell Biological Field Station |
In
2017, fisheries scientists with the USGS, Cornell University Department
of Natural Resources, The Nature Conservancy, and the New York State
Department of Environmental Conservation published their observations
from 2014 that confirmed Cisco spawning in Chaumont Bay in Jefferson
County, NY, suspected as one of the last remaining spawning populations
of Cisco in Lake Ontario. The workshop participants in 2018 agreed that
more research is needed to understand and restore Cisco, formerly an
abundant prey fish and commercial important species supporting fisheries
in Lake Ontario.
To
learn more about New York Sea Grant, a National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration cooperative program of Cornell University and the State
University of New York, visit www.nyseagrant.org.
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