Abstract

We measured serum calcium concentrations in mature white suckers and bluegills collected from clear‐water Wisconsin lakes before spawning. The mean serum calcium concentration in female white suckers was greater in a circumneutral lake than in two naturally acidic lakes, whereas mean concentrations in fish from the two acidic lakes did not differ. Serum calcium concentrations in female bluegills from four acidic and four circumneutral lakes varied among lakes, but no relation was apparent between serum calcium level and either lake pH or waterborne calcium. In contrast, a strong negative correlation between mean serum calcium concentration and relative density of bluegill populations in the eight lakes was observed, suggesting that serum calcium levels in this species are affected by density‐dependent factors. Mean serum calcium concentrations were substantially lower in mature male bluegills than in females, which is the norm prior to spawning. We hypothesized that serum calcium levels in female white suckers are depressed by exposure to pH 6.0 or less in calcium‐poor waters. The utility of serum calcium concentrations, measured before spawning, as a measure of pH‐related stress on populations of white suckers and other synchronous spawners merits further study. However, this measure is probably not useful for evaluating acid stress on fish species such as the bluegill, which have asynchronous reproductive cycles.

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