Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Ronald E. Kinnunen is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Ronald E. Kinnunen.


Transactions of The American Fisheries Society | 2004

Overwinter Survival of Juvenile Lake Herring in Relation to Body Size, Physiological Condition, Energy Stores, and Food Ration

Kevin L. Pangle; Trent M. Sutton; Ronald E. Kinnunen; Michael H. Hoff

Abstract Populations of lake herring Coregonus artedi in Lake Superior have exhibited high recruitment variability over the past three decades. To improve our understanding of the mechanisms which influence year-class strength, we conducted a 225-d laboratory experiment to evaluate the effects of body size, physiological condition, energy stores, and food ration on the winter survival of age-0 lake herring. Small (total length (TL) range = 60–85 mm) and large (TL range = 86–110 mm) fish were maintained under thermal and photoperiod regimes that mimicked those in Lake Superior from October through May. Fish in each size-class were maintained at two feeding treatments: brine shrimp Artemia spp. ad libitum and no food. The mortality of large lake herring (fed, 3.8%; starved, 20.1%) was significantly less than that of small fish (fed, 11.7%; starved, 32.0%). Body condition and crude lipid content declined for all fish over the experiment; however, these variables were significantly greater for large fed (0.68...


North American Journal of Fisheries Management | 2009

A Synthesis of Cisco Recovery in Lake Superior: Implications for Native Fish Rehabilitation in the Laurentian Great Lakes

Jason D. Stockwell; Mark P. Ebener; Jeff A. Black; Owen T. Gorman; Thomas R. Hrabik; Ronald E. Kinnunen; William P. Mattes; Jason K. Oyadomari; Stephen T. Schram; Donald R. Schreiner; Michael J. Seider; Shawn P. Sitar; Daniel L. Yule

Abstract Populations of cisco Coregonus artedi in the Laurentian Great Lakes supported large-scale commercial fisheries and were the primary forage of piscivores during the first half of the 20th century. However, by 1970 populations had collapsed in all of the lakes. Since then, ciscoes have staged a recovery in Lake Superior. In this synthesis, we describe the status of ciscoes in Lake Superior during 1970–2006 and provide a comprehensive review of their ecology. Better understanding of age estimation techniques, application of hydroacoustic and midwater trawl sampling, and compilation of long-term data sets have advanced our understanding of the species. Management agencies contemplating rehabilitation of cisco populations should recognize that (1) knowledge of cisco ecology and population dynamics is increasing; (2) ciscoes are long-lived; (3) Great Lakes populations are probably composed of both shallow-water and deepwater spawning forms; (4) large year-classes can be produced from small adult stocks...


North American Journal of Fisheries Management | 2008

An Evaluation of Age Estimation Structures for Lake Whitefish in Lake Michigan: Selecting an Aging Method Based on Precision and a Decision Analysis

Andrew M. Muir; Trent M. Sutton; Paul J. Peeters; Randall M. Claramunt; Ronald E. Kinnunen

Abstract Declines in growth and condition of lake whitefish Coregonus clupeaformis in Lakes Huron and Michigan have led to increased mean age in the harvest and greater difficulty in scale age interpretation. We evaluated the precision and efficiency of scale acetate impressions, transverse pectoral fin ray sections, and transverse sagittal otolith sections for three lake whitefish stocks (Baileys Harbor, Naubinway, and Saugatuck) that were sampled in Lake Michigan during 2004 and 2005. We conducted a decision matrix analysis that incorporated capital, production, and personnel costs and precision of age estimates to determine the best aging method given current management priorities. For the Baileys Harbor stock, age estimates were systematically lower based on scales (mean = 7.85 years) than based on fin rays (8.44 years) or otoliths (8.78 years); fin ray and otolith estimates did not differ significantly. Similar results were observed for both Naubinway and Saugatuck stocks. For Baileys Harbor lake ...


Journal of Great Lakes Research | 2010

Does Condition of Lake Whitefish Spawners Affect Physiological Condition of Juveniles

Andrew M. Muir; Trent M. Sutton; Michael T. Arts; Randall M. Claramunt; Mark P. Ebener; John D. Fitzsimons; Timothy B. Johnson; Ronald E. Kinnunen; Marten A. Koops; Maria M. Sepúlveda

ABSTRACT Recent declines in growth and condition of several Great Lakes lake whitefish populations have raised concerns over potential impacts on juvenile physiological condition and ultimately recruitment. To test whether the condition of spawning adults influences juvenile condition via energy allocation dynamics, we partitioned the variation in age 0 juvenile physiological condition (i.e., growth in length and weight, whole-body moisture content, energy density, and protein content) among adult male and female (i.e., body condition, muscle moisture content, energy density, and protein content) and egg (i.e., wet and dry weight, moisture content, energy density, energy content per egg, and protein content) effects using redundancy analysis. Overall, a model that included sampling site, female condition, and egg quality explained 39% of the variation in juvenile physiological condition. After partitioning out the effects of females and eggs, site explained the most variation (23%). When other factors were accounted for, neither females (1.4%) nor eggs (2.7%) explained much variation in juvenile physiological condition. Of the variables studied, female muscle energy density, muscle moisture content, and egg moisture content were most closely associated with juvenile physiological condition. Our results suggest that parental effects, such as size, age, body condition, or body composition, may not be as important as extrinsic site-related effects or density-dependent effects in determining juvenile physiological condition.


Human and Ecological Risk Assessment | 2013

Omega-3 Fatty Acids in Fish from the Laurentian Great Lakes Tribal Fisheries

Michael D. Moths; John A. Dellinger; Bruce J. Holub; Michael P. Ripley; Joseph McGraw; Ronald E. Kinnunen

ABSTRACT Dietary fish must be assessed for benefits and risks to formulate risk management strategies. This article demonstrates that Laurentian Great Lakes (GL) freshwater species are good sources of omega-3 fatty acids using new data from a small sample (n = 7) of Lake Superior siscowet lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush siscowet) and five other GL fish species’ data. For Lake Superior (LS) siscowets, the saturates, mono-unsaturates, and poly-unsaturates composed 20.1, 40.7, and 39.1% of total lipid weight, respectively. Omega-3 poly-unsaturates (PUFAs) in these fish were more than twice the omega-6 (omega 3/6 ratio = 2.4). The LS lake trout data were combined with earlier LS data collected during the 1980s for eight other species and from five species of Lake Erie fish. All the GL freshwater species were compared with seven other published marine and freshwater fish studies from other global regions. PUFAs were compared based on latitude and marine versus freshwater origin. Differences between marine and freshwater species in omega-3 fatty acid were less at higher latitudes. GL freshwater fish species can be a good source of beneficial fats like marine fish and must be accounted in effective risk communications involving persistent bioaccumulative toxicants in dietary fish.


Journal of Great Lakes Research | 2010

Linking lake whitefish (Coregonus clupeaformis) condition with male gamete quality and quantity

E.A. Blukacz; Marten A. Koops; Trent M. Sutton; Michael T. Arts; John D. Fitzsimons; Andrew M. Muir; Randall M. Claramunt; Timothy B. Johnson; Ronald E. Kinnunen; Mark P. Ebener; Cory D. Suski; G. Burness

ABSTRACT Sexual-selection theory predicts males will increase investment in ejaculates if there is an increase in the level of sperm competition. Production of ejaculates is energetically costly, so males in better condition should be able to produce ejaculates of higher quality than individuals in poorer condition. We examined how ejaculate investment (i.e., relative testes mass) and sperm quality (i.e., sperm swimming speed) in lake whitefish (Coregonus clupeaformis) were related to residual soma mass, fork length, and fish age using data collected from Lake Michigan and Bay of Quinte (Lake Ontario). Populations from both lakes had positive relationships between relative testes mass and residual soma mass. Fork length was the most important predictor of sperm swimming speed with larger males from both lakes tending to have faster swimming sperm than smaller fish. Testis asymmetry, which is a commonly observed phenomenon in other animals but which has only recently been reported in fishes, was found to occur in the majority of examined lake whitefish with the left testes typically larger than the right.


Rural Sociology | 2008

Local Understanding of Fish Consumption Advisory Risks in Michigan's Upper Peninsula: The Role of Structure, Culture, and Agency*

Geoffrey Habron; Melanie Barbier; Ronald E. Kinnunen

Fish consumption advisories fail to adequately help communities address the benefits and risks of eating potentially contaminated fish. We engaged community members and relevant institutions in identifying and implementing more effective risk communication in Michigans rural Upper Peninsula. In 2004-2005, we collected data in four Michigan counties through focus groups, community dinners, public meetings and angler interviews. Residents express a strong affinity toward eating Great Lakes fish, though a minority of participants have read the official fish advisory. Participants lack an understanding of how bioaccumulation affects consumption risk depending on the type of contaminant. We attribute the situation to conditions of post-normal risk that emerge through interaction of the structural dimensions of science and bureaucracy with a strong natural resource-based culture that affects the agency of residents. The implications loom large as Michigans Department of Community Health no longer distributes hard copies of the Michigan Fish Advisory.


Journal of Great Lakes Research | 2005

Effects of Body Size, Condition, and Lipid Content on the Survival of Juvenile Lake Herring During Rapid Cooling Events

Kevin L. Pangle; Trent M. Sutton; Ronald E. Kinnunen; Michael H. Hoff

Abstract Juvenile lake herring Coregonus artedi were exposed to rapid cooling events during two laboratory experiments to determine the effects of body size, physiological condition, and lipid content on survival. The first experiment was conducted at the onset of winter, exposing small (50 to 85 mm) and large (85 to 129 mm) fish to a decline in water temperature from 12 to 2°C at a rate of 1°C/hr. During this experiment, both large and small individuals exposed to a rapid cooling event experienced no mortality or abnormal behaviors. Separate fish were then maintained under thermal and photoperiod regimes that mimicked those in Lake Superior from October through May. Fish in each size class were maintained at two feeding treatments: Artemia ad libitum and no food. At the completion of the winter period, these lake herring were subjected to the same rapid cooling event conducted in the first experiment. During the experiment, lake herring exhibited no mortality or abnormal behaviors despite treatment-dependent differences in condition and lipid content. Our results indicate that mortality due to rapid cooling events does not appear to contribute to the recruitment variability observed for juvenile lake herring in Lake Superior.


Archive | 2004

A PROFILE OF THE AQUACULTURE OF TROUT IN THE UNITED STATES

Jeffrey M. Hinshaw; Gary Fornshell; Ronald E. Kinnunen


Journal of Applied Polymer Science | 2016

Is there value in chemical modification of fish scale surfaces

Xu Xiang; Fei Long; Ameya Narkar; Ronald E. Kinnunen; Reza Shahbazian-Yassar; Bruce P. Lee; Patricia A. Heiden

Collaboration


Dive into the Ronald E. Kinnunen's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Trent M. Sutton

University of Alaska Fairbanks

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Andrew M. Muir

Great Lakes Fishery Commission

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mark P. Ebener

University of Wisconsin–Stevens Point

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Randall M. Claramunt

Michigan Department of Natural Resources

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Marten A. Koops

Fisheries and Oceans Canada

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Michael T. Arts

National Water Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

John D. Fitzsimons

Fisheries and Oceans Canada

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Timothy B. Johnson

Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ameya Narkar

Michigan Technological University

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge