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Determining the consistency of thermal habitat segregation within and among Arctic charr morphotypes in Gander Lake,Newfoundland
Authors:Michael Power  Michael F. O’Connell  Brian Dempson
Affiliation:1. Department of Biology, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, ON, N2L 3G1, Canada;2. Science Branch, Fisheries and Oceans Canada, PO Box 5667, St. John’s, NL, A1C 5X1, Canada
Abstract:Abstract – Otolith carbon and oxygen isotope data obtained from distinct genetic and ecological groups of lacustrine Arctic charr, Salvelinus alpinus L., from Gander Lake, Newfoundland, were used to examine hypotheses regarding the consistency of differential habitat use among the groups. Results indicated thermal habitat separation by group, with small ‘pale’ individuals consistently remaining in cooler profundal habitats and larger ‘dark’ individuals more frequently occupying warmer upper water column habitats. Theoretical measures of resource separation and competition indicated lower thermal habitat overlap among the forms and greater within‐form competition. Depth at capture data indicated more varied short‐term use of available lake habitats by ‘dark’ form Arctic charr, possibly as a result of cannibalistic foraging on profundal ‘pale’ form fish. Nominal capture depth data only partially explained observed variation in the mean temperature of occupied thermal habitat, suggesting that capture depth can only be used as a rough index of thermal habitat use. Provided that sufficient thermal gradients exist in the environments being studied, otolith oxygen isotopes provide a useful means of establishing the significance of niche differentiation among individuals.
Keywords:Arctic charr  Salvelinus alpinus  oxygen stable isotope analysis  habitat segregation  Gander Lake  Newfoundland
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