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Dive into the research topics where Todd A. Hayden is active.

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Featured researches published by Todd A. Hayden.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Acoustic telemetry reveals large-scale migration patterns of walleye in Lake Huron

Todd A. Hayden; Christopher M. Holbrook; David G. Fielder; Christopher S. Vandergoot; Roger A. Bergstedt; John M. Dettmers; Charles C. Krueger; Steven J. Cooke

Fish migration in large freshwater lacustrine systems such as the Laurentian Great Lakes is not well understood. The walleye (Sander vitreus) is an economically and ecologically important native fish species throughout the Great Lakes. In Lake Huron walleye has recently undergone a population expansion as a result of recovery of the primary stock, stemming from changing food web dynamics. During 2011 and 2012, we used acoustic telemetry to document the timing and spatial scale of walleye migration in Lake Huron and Saginaw Bay. Spawning walleye (n = 199) collected from a tributary of Saginaw Bay were implanted with acoustic tags and their migrations were documented using acoustic receivers (n = 140) deployed throughout U.S. nearshore waters of Lake Huron. Three migration pathways were described using multistate mark-recapture models. Models were evaluated using the Akaike Information Criterion. Fish sex did not influence migratory behavior but did affect migration rate and walleye were detected on all acoustic receiver lines. Most (95%) tagged fish migrated downstream from the riverine tagging and release location to Saginaw Bay, and 37% of these fish emigrated from Saginaw Bay into Lake Huron. Remarkably, 8% of walleye that emigrated from Saginaw Bay were detected at the acoustic receiver line located farthest from the release location more than 350 km away. Most (64%) walleye returned to the Saginaw River in 2012, presumably for spawning. Our findings reveal that fish from this stock use virtually the entirety of U.S. nearshore waters of Lake Huron.


Journal of Thermal Biology | 2015

Seasonal thermal ecology of adult walleye (Sander vitreus) in Lake Huron and Lake Erie

Tyler B. Peat; Todd A. Hayden; Lee F.G. Gutowsky; Christopher S. Vandergoot; David G. Fielder; Charles P. Madenjian; Karen J. Murchie; John M. Dettmers; Charles C. Krueger; Steven J. Cooke

The purpose of this study was to characterize thermal patterns and generate occupancy models for adult walleye from lakes Erie and Huron with internally implanted biologgers coupled with a telemetry study to assess the effects of sex, fish size, diel periods, and lake. Sex, size, and diel periods had no effect on thermal occupancy of adult walleye in either lake. Thermal occupancy differed between lakes and seasons. Walleye from Lake Erie generally experienced higher temperatures throughout the spring and summer months than did walleye in Lake Huron, due to limnological differences between the lakes. Tagged walleye that remained in Saginaw Bay, Lake Huron (i.e., adjacent to the release location), as opposed to those migrating to the main basin of Lake Huron, experienced higher temperatures, and thus accumulated more thermal units (the amount of temperature units amassed over time) throughout the year. Walleye that migrated toward the southern end of Lake Huron occupied higher temperatures than those that moved toward the north. Consequently, walleye that emigrated from Saginaw Bay experienced thermal environments that were more favorable for growth as they spent more time within their thermal optimas than those that remained in Saginaw Bay. Results presented in this paper provide information on the thermal experience of wild fish in a large lake, and could be used to refine sex- and lake-specific bioenergetics models of walleye in the Great Lakes to enable the testing of ecological hypotheses.


Animal Biotelemetry | 2016

Spatial and temporal variation in positioning probability of acoustic telemetry arrays: fine-scale variability and complex interactions

Thomas R. Binder; Christopher M. Holbrook; Todd A. Hayden; Charles C. Krueger


Animal Biotelemetry | 2016

Probability of acoustic transmitter detections by receiver lines in Lake Huron: results of multi-year field tests and simulations

Todd A. Hayden; Christopher M. Holbrook; Thomas R. Binder; John M. Dettmers; Steven J. Cooke; Christopher S. Vandergoot; Charles C. Krueger


Ecology of Freshwater Fish | 2018

Spawning site fidelity and apparent annual survival of walleye (Sander vitreus) differ between a Lake Huron and Lake Erie tributary

Todd A. Hayden; Thomas R. Binder; Christopher M. Holbrook; Christopher S. Vandergoot; David G. Fielder; Steven J. Cooke; John M. Dettmers; Charles C. Krueger


Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences | 2018

Acoustic Telemetry Observation Systems: challenges encountered and overcome in the Laurentian Great Lakes

Charles C. Krueger; Christopher M. Holbrook; Thomas R. Binder; Christopher S. Vandergoot; Todd A. Hayden; Darryl W. Hondorp; Nancy A. Nate; Kelli Paige; Stephen C. Riley; Aaron T. Fisk; Steven J. Cooke


Journal of Great Lakes Research | 2017

Movement patterns and spatial segregation of two populations of lake trout Salvelinus namaycush in Lake Huron

Thomas R. Binder; J. Ellen Marsden; Stephen C. Riley; James E. Johnson; Nicholas S. Johnson; Ji He; Mark P. Ebener; Christopher M. Holbrook; Roger A. Bergstedt; Charles R. Bronte; Todd A. Hayden; Charles C. Krueger


Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences | 2018

Temperature regimes, growth, and food consumption for female and male adult walleye in Lake Huron and Lake Erie: a bioenergetics analysis

Charles P. Madenjian; Todd A. Hayden; Tyler B. Peat; Christopher S. Vandergoot; David G. Fielder; Ann Marie Gorman; Steven A. Pothoven; John M. Dettmers; Steven J. Cooke; Yingming Zhao; Charles C. Krueger


Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences | 2018

Does behavioural thermoregulation underlie seasonal movements in Lake Erie walleye

Graham D. Raby; Christopher S. Vandergoot; Todd A. Hayden; Matthew D. Faust; Richard T. Kraus; John M. Dettmers; Steven J. Cooke; Yingming Zhao; Aaron T. Fisk; Charles C. Krueger


Ecology of Freshwater Fish | 2017

Do intracoelomic telemetry transmitters alter the post-release behaviour of migratory fish?

Alexander D. M. Wilson; Todd A. Hayden; Christopher S. Vandergoot; Richard T. Kraus; John M. Dettmers; Steven J. Cooke; Charles C. Krueger

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Christopher S. Vandergoot

Ohio Department of Natural Resources

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John M. Dettmers

Great Lakes Fishery Commission

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David G. Fielder

Michigan Department of Natural Resources

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Christopher M. Holbrook

United States Geological Survey

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Matthew D. Faust

Ohio Department of Natural Resources

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