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Featured researches published by Ross F. Tallman.


Transactions of The American Fisheries Society | 2001

Identification of Freshwater and Anadromous Inconnu in the Mackenzie River System by Analysis of Otolith Strontium

Kimberly L. Howland; William M. Tonn; John A. Babaluk; Ross F. Tallman

Abstract Because trace elements from the environment are incorporated into the otoliths of fish as they grow, otolith microchemistry can be used to reconstruct key aspects of their environmental history, such as migratory patterns. We used scanning proton microprobe analysis on otoliths of inconnu Stenodus leucichthys from the Mackenzie River system (Northwest Territories, Canada) to determine whether patterns of strontium (Sr) distribution supported the hypothesis that some populations are anadromous while others remain in a low-Sr freshwater environment. The otoliths of inconnu from the Slave River had low, flat Sr profiles, indicating that these fish spent their entire lives within a freshwater environment. In contrast, while the otoliths of inconnu from the Arctic Red River varied substantially, they generally had low, flat profiles near the core followed by oscillating patterns of high and low Sr through to the outer edge of the otolith. These latter profiles indicate that these fish spent their firs...


Journal of Fish Biology | 2011

Small-scale Arctic charr Salvelinus alpinus fisheries in Canada's Nunavut: management challenges and options

M. J. Roux; Ross F. Tallman; C. W. Lewis

The Arctic charr Salvelinus alpinus is a diverse and abundant resource in Canadas Nunavut. The anadromous form is primarily targeted by exploitation in small-scale fisheries. The continued importance of subsistence fisheries and growing interest in further developing commercial fisheries underline the need for proper management of S. alpinus in northern Canada. This paper presents the current state of S. alpinus fisheries in Nunavut and related management challenges. An alternate framework for assessment using life-history information as it determines stock productivity and resilience to harvesting is presented. This framework combines (1) a risk assessment tool [productivity-susceptibility analysis (PSA)] to evaluate the relative vulnerability of S. alpinus stocks to harvest and (2) a conceptual model for quantitative assessment to determine sustainable harvest levels. Diversity in S. alpinus life history and contrast in vulnerability scores derived from PSA assessment are demonstrated for a sample of 86 anadromous stocks from throughout Nunavut. These data provide evidence in support of an alternate strategy for assessment permitting to integrate diversity in S. alpinus life history for improved generalization and representativeness. Salvelinus alpinus fisheries in Arctic regions exemplify the need for stock assessment and management alternatives to ensure fish conservation in remote, sensitive ecosystems and in data-poor circumstances.


Annales Zoologici Fennici | 2004

Age determination of a long-lived coregonid from the Canadian North: comparison of otoliths, fin rays and scales in inconnu (Stenodus leucichthys)

Kimberly L. Howland; Michel Gendron; William M. Tonn; Ross F. Tallman

We examined otoliths, pelvic fin rays and scales of inconnu to determine precision of age estimates within and between readers, and to compare relative accuracy of estimates from different structures. Our main objective was to determine if readability and estimates from fin rays and scales, which can be non-lethally removed, were similar to those of otoliths, which are generally considered the most reliable ageing structure. Among- and within-reader variation was low for both fin rays and otoliths, but higher for scales. Variation tended to increase with fish length for all structures. Scales were most difficult to read and had age estimates that were significantly lower than the other structures at ages of ten years and greater. Age estimates and readability of fin rays and otoliths were similar.


Environmental Biology of Fishes | 1998

Seasonal variation in diet and trophic relationships within the fish communities of the lower Slave River, Northwest Territories, Canada

Alison S. Little; William M. Tonn; Ross F. Tallman; James D. Reist

Increased industrial activities on the Peace and Athabasca River systems have raised concerns about cumulative impacts on fish and water resources downstream, in the Slave River of Alberta and the Northwest Territories, Canada. Because very little information was available on the fish communities in this system, we examined spatial and temporal patterns of diet for nine species (four piscivores and five invertebrate feeders) from three different types of habitat along the lower Slave River system and assessed trophic relationships within the communities. All actively feeding species exhibited seasonal variations in diet within and among the study areas. Dietary overlap was generally low throughout all seasons and locations. In the lower Slave River and its major tributary, the Salt River, substantial dietary overlap between piscivores (particularly walleye, Stizostedion vitreum), and invertebrate feeders occurred in the spring. In the summer no overlap occurred as walleye shifted to a more piscivorous diet, attaining a moderate degree of overlap with northern pike, Esox lucius. Compared with the Slave River, which is a large but homogeneous system upstream of its delta at Great Slave Lake, there was a greater diversity of actively feeding invertebrate feeders in the Salt River. Three of the latter were benthic feeders exhibiting moderate degrees of diet overlap during spring and summer. During the fall, few fish were feeding. Most fishes in the lower Slave River system are generalist, opportunistic feeders, consuming a number of different prey, the importance of which varies spatially and seasonally, as the abundance of these prey varies in the environment.


Transactions of The American Fisheries Society | 2000

Migration Patterns of Freshwater and Anadromous Inconnu in the Mackenzie River System

Kimberly L. Howland; Ross F. Tallman; William M. Tonn

Abstract Radiotelemetry, long-term seasonal gillnetting, and a synthesis of existing historical data revealed that both freshwater and anadromous inconnu Stenodus leucichthys in the Mackenzie River system are migratory, but their feeding/overwintering habitats and the timing and distance of their spawning migrations differ substantially. An anadromous population (Arctic Red River) began upstream migration 2–2.5 months earlier and spawned approximately 3 weeks earlier than did a freshwater population (Slave River), likely because of latitudinal differences in temperature regimes and the additional distance required by anadromous inconnu to reach spawning grounds. Little mixing occurred between anadromous inconnu in the lower Mackenzie River and freshwater inconnu in the Great Slave Lake area, and based on tagging data, a third fluvial form may exist in the upper Mackenzie River. Inconnu in the lower Mackenzie migrate more extensively and use both coastal areas and the outer Mackenzie Delta for feeding and ...


Journal of Fish Biology | 2009

Ecological niche specialization inferred from morphological variation and otolith strontium of Arctic charr Salvelinus alpinus L. found within open lake systems of southern Baffin Island, Nunavut, Canada

Tracey N. Loewen; Darren M. Gillis; Ross F. Tallman

The presence of two morphotypes of Arctic charr Salvelinus alpinus was confirmed via morphological variation and otolith strontium (Sr) within three open-lake systems of southern Baffin Island, Nunavut, Canada: Qinngu (LH001), Iqalugaarjuit Lake (PG082) and Qasigiat (PG015). Analysis of otolith Sr indicates that a component of each S. alpinus population within lakes LH001 and PG082 is migratory (large-maturing S. alpinus), whereas another component is lake-resident (small-maturing S. alpinus). Alternatively, small and large maturing S. alpinus may both inhabit tidal habitats during their lifetime in lake PG015. Three morphological characters were identified by principal factor analysis (PFA) as characters that were different between maturity groups for all lakes studied: eye diameter, pectoral fin length and pelvic fin length. As well, upper jaw length (LH001 and PG082) and fork depth (PG015) were identified in PFA as traits that differed between morphs. Univariate tests of morphological characters identified by PFA demonstrated maturity group differences with the exception of eye diameter in Lake PG015 and upper jaw length and pelvic fin length in lake LH001. No difference was found in the MANOVA test of upper and lower gill raker number between small-maturing and undeveloped fish within all lakes studied. Clear morphological variation observed between small-maturing and undeveloped fish in all three lakes of the study suggests ecological niche separation between morphotypes. This is the first documented case of lake-resident S. alpinus use of the tidal habitat in the presence of a migratory large-maturing morphotype.


Environmental Biology of Fishes | 2014

Geographic influences on fine-scale, hierarchical population structure in northern Canadian populations of anadromous Arctic Char (Salvelinus alpinus)

Les N. Harris; Jean-Sébastien Moore; Paul Galpern; Ross F. Tallman; Eric B. Taylor

Assessments of fine-scale population structure in natural populations are important for understanding aspects of ecology, life history variation and evolutionary history and can provide novel insights into resource management. Although Arctic char, Salvelinus alpinus, represent one of the most culturally and commercially important salmonids in the Canadian Arctic, fine-scale assessments of genetic structure in northern populations of this species are rare. In this study, we assessed population structure in anadromous Arctic char from Cumberland Sound in Canada’s Nunavut territory using 18 microsatellite loci. Specifically, we aimed at identifying potential habitat and landscape/geographic features influencing genetic variation and population structure and resolving potential barriers to gene flow. Overall population structure was moderate (global FST and Jost’s D of 0.042 and 0.236 respectively) and significant among all sampling locations. Habitat and landscape/geographic features, with the exception of fluvial (shoreline) distance, appeared to have little influence on genetic variation and population structure. Bayesian clustering revealed a hierarchical model of population structure, in which the 14 sampling locations were nested within two distinct clusters corresponding to the north and south shores of Cumberland Sound. Both isolation-by-distance analysis and calculations of mean dispersal distance suggest dispersal and gene flow is highest among proximate locations. Finally, several putative barriers to gene flow were identified and one, a putative barrier separating north and south Cumberland Sound, was consistent with the hierarchical STRUCTURE results. Our results suggest that the current river-specific management of commercially harvested Arctic char is appropriate. Overall, we provide further insights into the evolution of genetic variation and population structure in iteroparous, Arctic salmonids.


Molecular Ecology | 2017

Sex matters in Massive Parallel Sequencing: evidence for biases in genetic parameter estimation and investigation of sex determination systems

Laura Benestan; Jean-Sébastien Moore; Ben Sutherland; Jérémy Le Luyer; Halim Maaroufi; Clement Rougeux; Eric Normandeau; Nathan Rycroft; Jelle Atema; Les N. Harris; Ross F. Tallman; Spencer J. Greenwood; K. Fraser Clark; Louis Bernatchez

Using massively parallel sequencing data from two species with different life history traits, American lobster (Homarus americanus) and Arctic Char (Salvelinus alpinus), we highlight how an unbalanced sex ratio in the samples and a few sex-linked markers may lead to false interpretations of population structure and thus to potentially erroneous management recommendations. Here, multivariate analyses revealed two genetic clusters separating samples by sex instead of by expected spatial variation: inshore and offshore locations in lobster, or east and west locations in Arctic Char. To further investigate this, we created several subsamples artificially varying the sex ratio in the inshore/offshore and east/west groups and then demonstrated that significant genetic differentiation could be observed despite panmixia in lobster, and that FST values were overestimated in Arctic Char. This pattern was due to 12 and 94 sex-linked markers driving differentiation for lobster and Arctic Char, respectively. Removing sex-linked markers led to nonsignificant genetic structure in lobster and a more accurate estimation of FST in Arctic Char. The locations of these markers and putative identities of genes containing or nearby the markers were determined using available transcriptomic and genomic data, and this provided new information related to sex determination in both species. Given that only 9.6% of all marine/diadromous population genomic studies to date have reported sex information, we urge researchers to collect and consider individual sex information. Sex information is therefore relevant for avoiding unexpected biases due to sex-linked markers as well as for improving our knowledge of sex determination systems in nonmodel species.


Hydrobiologia | 2010

Maturation, growth and fecundity of Arctic charr, Salvelinus alpinus (L.), life-history variants co-existing in lake systems of Southern Baffin Island, Nunavut, Canada

Tracey N. Loewen; Darren M. Gillis; Ross F. Tallman

Two life-history variants of Arctic charr (Salvelinus alpinus), anadromous and lake-resident, have been previously identified in lakes of Southern Baffin Island, Nunavut, Canada. In accordance with classical life-history theory, it is hypothesised that anadromous charr will delay maturation in both size and age, and have increased fecundity (per spawning event) in comparison with lake-resident charr. Sagittal otoliths and biological data were collected for both life-history variants within the three studied lakes: Iqalugaarjuit, Qasigiat and Qinngu. Sagittal otoliths were embedded in epoxy resin, cross-sectioned for age determination, and imaged for back-calculation (size and age). Back-calculated data in each lake were fit to von Bertalanffy growth models for each life-history variant and compared via analysis of residual sums of squares. Anadromous charr had greater mean size at maturity and experienced a delay in mean age at maturity in comparison with lake-residents. The relationship between size and fecundity or egg diameter did not differ between the two life-history variants. Growth models indicate that the overall growth coefficients of lake-resident and anadromous charr were different in all three studied lakes. The Brody growth coefficient for all lake-resident charr populations was greater than anadromous individuals indicating that maximum length was reached at a rapid rate, resulting in a smaller asymptotic length. Indirect evidence suggests that anadromous and lake-resident charr belong to one reproductive population. Future genetic analysis is necessary to further determine the degree of divergence between the life-history variants.


Journal of Fish Biology | 2014

Genetic analysis of sympatric migratory ecotypes of Arctic charr Salvelinus alpinus: alternative mating tactics or reproductively isolated strategies?

Jean-Sébastien Moore; Tracey N. Loewen; Les N. Harris; Ross F. Tallman

Three populations of Arctic charr Salvelinus alpinus from southern Baffin Island were previously identified to display variable migratory phenotypes, with an anadromous component of the population and another remaining resident in fresh water. In this study, 14 microsatellite markers were used to help distinguish between two alternative hypotheses to explain the co-existence of the two ecotypes: that the two ecotypes originate from a single population and are the result of a conditional mating tactic or that the migratory ecotypes are reproductively isolated populations utilizing alternative migratory strategies. In two of the three replicate systems, F(ST) values between the resident and anadromous individuals were non-significant, while they were significant in a third sampling location. Bayesian clustering analysis implemented in structure, however, failed to identify any within-location clustering in all three sampling locations. It is concluded from these analyses that the life-history ecotypes are most likely conditional mating tactics, rather than reproductively isolated populations. Other evidence in favour of the alternative mating tactic hypothesis is briefly reviewed, and implications for management of those populations are discussed.

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Les N. Harris

Fisheries and Oceans Canada

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James D. Reist

Fisheries and Oceans Canada

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