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Dive into the research topics where Mark A. Pegg is active.

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Featured researches published by Mark A. Pegg.


Biological Invasions | 2009

Diet overlap among two Asian carp and three native fishes in backwater lakes on the Illinois and Mississippi rivers

Schuyler J. Sampson; John H. Chick; Mark A. Pegg

Bighead and silver carp are well established in the Mississippi River basin following their accidental introduction in the 1980s. Referred to collectively as Asian carp, these species are filter feeders consuming phytoplankton and zooplankton. We examined diet overlap and electivity of Asian carp and three native filter feeding fishes, bigmouth buffalo, gizzard shad, and paddlefish, in backwater lakes of the Illinois and Mississippi rivers. Rotifers, Keratella spp., Brachionus spp., and Trichocerca spp., were the most common prey items consumed by Asian carp and gizzard shad, whereas crustacean zooplankton were the preferred prey of paddlefish. Bigmouth buffalo diet was broad, including both rotifers and crustacean zooplankton. Dietary overlap with Asian carp was greatest for gizzard shad followed by bigmouth buffalo, but we found little diet overlap for paddlefish. Diet similarity based on taxonomy correlated strongly with diet similarity based on size suggesting filtration efficiency influenced the overlap patterns we observed. Although rotifers were the most common prey item consumed by both bighead and silver carp, we found a negative relation between silver carp CPUE and cladoceran density. The competitive effect of Asian carp on native fishes may be forestalled because of the high productivity of Illinois and Mississippi river habitats, yet the potential for negative consequences of Asian carp in less productive ecosystems, including Lake Michigan, should not be underestimated.


Aquatic Sciences | 2003

Hydrological Alteration along the Missouri River Basin: A Time Series Approach

Mark A. Pegg; Clay L. Pierce; Anindya Roy

Abstract. Human alteration of large rivers is commonplace, often resulting in significant changes in flow characteristics. We used a time series approach to examine daily mean flow data from locations throughout the mainstem Missouri River. Data from a pre-alteration period (1925–1948) were compared with a post-alteration period (1967–1996), with separate analyses conducted using either data from the entire year or restricted to the spring fish spawning period (1 April–30 June). Daily mean flows were significantly higher during the post-alteration period at all locations. Flow variability was markedly reduced during the post-alteration period as a probable result of flow regulation and climatological shifts. Daily mean flow during the spring fish spawning period was significantly lower during the post-alteration period at the most highly altered locations in the middle portion of the river, but unchanged at the least altered locations in the upper and lower port ions of the river. Our data also corroborate other analyses, using alternate statistical approaches, that suggest similar changes to the Missouri River system. Our results suggest human alterations on the Missouri River, particularly in the middle portion most strongly affected by impoundments and channelization, have resulted in changes to the natural flow regime.


North American Journal of Fisheries Management | 2002

Potential Influence of Harvest on Shovelnose Sturgeon Populations in the Missouri River System

Michael C. Quist; Christopher S. Guy; Mark A. Pegg; Patrick J. Braaten; Clay L. Pierce; Vincent H. Travnichek

Abstract The collapse of the European and Asian caviar industry has raised concern about the overexploitation of shovelnose sturgeon Scaphirhynchus platorynchus in the Missouri River. Unfortunately, little is known about the potential effects of harvest on the population dynamics of this species. Therefore, this study was conducted to describe the population characteristics (e.g., growth, longevity, and mortality) and to determine the influence of exploitation and harvest regulations (minimum length limits) on the yield, size structure, and egg production of shovelnose sturgeon from three sites in the Missouri River using a Beverton–Holt equilibrium model. Despite differences in the population characteristics (e.g., growth and longevity) of shovelnose sturgeon among sites, all populations responded similarly to harvest at the conditional natural mortality rates (death rate in the absence of harvest) used in our simulations (i.e., 5% and 20%). Our simulations of yield indicated that growth overfishing (i.e...


North American Journal of Fisheries Management | 1997

Movement of saugers in the lower Tennessee River determined by radio telemetry, and implications for management

Mark A. Pegg; Phillip W. Bettoli; James B. Layzer

Abstract Since 1979, abundances of sauger Stizostedion canadense have declined in the Tennessee River system. Reasons for this decline may include overharvest, loss of spawning habitat, and low recruitment due to extreme flows. The purpose of this study was to investigate the movements of saugers following winter concentration below Pickwick Dam, Tennessee. Thirty-seven saugers were implanted with radio transmitters directly below Pickwick Dam and were tracked between December 1992 and June 1993. Four saugers moved upstream through the locks at Pickwick Dam: the remaining fish stayed within the first 30 km of the tailwater throughout the spawning season. Three areas below Pickwick Dam were identified as possible March prespawn staging sites. After April 1, saugers in the tailwater area began a rapid downstream migration to the main basin of Kentucky Lake. Some fish moved downstream more than 200 km in less than 10 d in this semiclosed system. Movements encompassed four states (Kentucky, Tennessee, Mississ...


Hydrobiologia | 2002

Fish community structure in the Missouri and lower Yellowstone rivers in relation to flow characteristics

Mark A. Pegg; Clay L. Pierce

Human alteration is commonplace among large rivers and often results in changes in the flow regime which can lead to changes in fish community structure. We explored the features of fish community structure, morphological characteristics, functional composition, and life-history attributes in relation to six unique flow regimes in the Missouri and lower Yellowstone rivers where we found significant differences in community composition and abundance. The clearest pattern was the distinction between the channelized portion of the river below the mainstem reservoirs and all other parts of the Missouri and lower Yellowstone rivers due to a marked reduction of species richness above the reservoirs. We also found morphological, functional, and life-history differences among the flow units, with the inter-reservoir communities consisting of slightly more generalist characteristics. Our results suggest some relation between flow and fish community structure, but that human alteration may have the strongest influence in distinguishing community differences in the Missouri and lower Yellowstone rivers.


American Midland Naturalist | 2006

Expansion of Round Goby in the Illinois Waterway

Kevin S. Irons; Michael A. McClelland; Mark A. Pegg

Abstract Round goby Neogobius melanostomus is expanding its range within Illinois. Prior to 2004, the round goby existed primarily in the Lake Michigan waters of Illinois and was slowly moving inland via the Illinois Waterway. Two fish community monitoring programs, administered by the Illinois Natural History Surveys Illinois River Biological Station, have detected this fish species as it further expanded its range in the Waterway. Although little is known how this non-native benthic fish could threaten ecosystems in Illinois, the rate of invasion appears to be quickening.


North American Journal of Fisheries Management | 2012

Population Size of Hatchery-Reared and Wild Pallid Sturgeon in the Lower Missouri River

K. D. Steffensen; Larkin A. Powell; Mark A. Pegg

Abstract The population size of pallid sturgeon Scaphirhynchus albus is currently unknown throughout much of the Missouri River. Listed as federally endangered in 1990, the pallid sturgeon remains one of the rarest fishes in the Missouri and Mississippi River basins, and little to no natural recruitment occurs. Artificial population supplementation via a hatchery propagation program was initiated, necessitating the collection of sexually mature pallid sturgeon. Therefore, the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission maintained an intensive broodstock collection and mark–recapture effort from 2008 to 2010 to capture reproductively ready adults for the propagation program. Coordinated crews fished baited trotlines from the confluence of the Platte and Missouri rivers at river kilometer (rkm) 957.6 to a point about 80.5 rkm downstream. A total of 438 pallid sturgeon were captured, which amounts to a 7.8% recapture rate. The objectives of the study were to (1) use these data to estimate the annual population sizes ...


Fisheries | 2012

Swimways: Protecting Paddlefish through Movement-centered Management

Brenda M. Pracheil; Mark A. Pegg; Larkin A. Powell; Gerald E. Mestl

ABSTRACT Attempts to mitigate lack of formal interjurisdictional paddlefish management have been made in the United States through the Mississippi River Interstate Cooperative Resource Association (MICRA). We used 1988–2009 data from the MICRA paddlefish (Polyodon spathula) stock assessment database—a database containing mark-recapture and biometric information on more than 30,000 individually marked wild paddlefish and more than 2 million hatchery origin paddlefish—to estimate survival and movement across large and potentially biologically relevant spatial scales. Paddlefish frequently moved between political jurisdictions with differing conservation strategies and harvest regulations and showed differences in survival parameter estimates throughout their range. We argue that the degree of interjursidictional movements, spatially variant survival rates, and conservation concerns associated with paddlefish necessitate more cohesive interjurisdictional management. Based on criteria used to establish flyway...


North American Journal of Fisheries Management | 2012

Tag Retention of T-Bar Anchor Tags and Passive Integrated Transponder Tags in Shovelnose Sturgeon

M. J. Hamel; J. J. Hammen; Mark A. Pegg

Abstract Capture–recapture methods are commonly used to estimate population parameters when the necessary assumptions are met. One of the broadest assumptions of capture–recapture models is that tags are not lost. Therefore, one must understand tag retention to be able to adjust estimates if tag loss occurs. Our objectives were to (1) determine retention rates of T-bar anchor tags and passive integrated transponder (PIT) tags injected into the dorsal musculature of shovelnose sturgeon Scaphirhynchus platorynchus and (2) determine whether using an alternative PIT-tagging location (the operculum) and a new tagging procedure (cyanoacrylate [i.e., superglue] to seal the tag insertion point) provided higher retention. The T-bar tags had a retention rate of 100%; PIT tag retention, however, was more variable. Injection of PIT tags along the dorsal fin resulted in a retention rate of 73%, and tag loss was observed throughout the 98-d experiment. The application of cyanoacrylate did not appear to deter PIT tag lo...


Transactions of The American Fisheries Society | 2006

Movements of adult radio-tagged bighead carp in the illinois river

Lindsay M. Peters; Mark A. Pegg; Ulrich G. Reinhardt

Abstract Populations of invasive bighead carp Hypophthalmichthys nobilis in the Mississippi River basin are rapidly increasing in size and range. However, the rate of expansion is not well understood. We used radiotelemetry to document movements of bighead carp within the LaGrange Reach of the Illinois River, Illinois, where populations have been documented since 1993. We surgically implanted radio transmitters into 42 adults in June 2003 and May–July 2004. Successful relocation of individuals decreased over time and ended in August of both years. We analyzed 132 observations from 23 adults and found a mean (±SE) movement rate of 1.70 ± 0.74 km/d. The highest movement rate was 14.33 km/d. The maximum distance traveled by an individual was 163 km upstream in 35 d, and the top 10% of movements as observed by boat were between 26.5 and 56.5 km within 3–10 d. Forty-three percent of fish died or dropped transmitters for unknown reasons, but handling, environmental conditions, or both may have contributed to th...

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M. J. Hamel

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Kevin L. Pope

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Jonathan J. Spurgeon

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Gerald E. Mestl

Nebraska Game and Parks Commission

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K. D. Steffensen

Nebraska Game and Parks Commission

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John H. Chick

Illinois Natural History Survey

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J. J. Hammen

United States Fish and Wildlife Service

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Michael A. McClelland

Illinois Natural History Survey

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Larkin A. Powell

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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M. L. Rugg

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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