Abstract
Young-of-the-year (YOY) smallmouth bass, Micropterus dolomieu, spend their first summer in littoral areas near their nests. Evidence indicates that nests of smallmouth bass in Lake Opeongo, Ontario, Canada are more abundant in downwind locations than in upwind areas. We hypothesize that wind-induced lower water temperatures and food availability in upwind nesting areas lead to lower growth rates of YOY bass in upwind than in downwind nesting areas. We show that water temperatures were 0.6–1.3 °C higher in downwind than upwind littoral areas during the period from mid-June to mid-July, when the YOY bass were on or near their nests. Although quite variable, zooplankton concentrations were also higher at downwind sites. In addition, bioenergetic simulations based on time series of field-measured temperatures predicted higher growth rates of YOY bass in the downwind sites. Growth rates based on sequential sampling of bass fry from their nests did not, however, differ statistically between upwind and downwind sites, although fry consistently weighed more downwind than upwind in the basin with the longer fetch possibly due to earlier spring warming. Our hypothesis is thus only partially supported and we call for further research on effects of spatial gradients on smallmouth bass life history.
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