Abstract

Adfluvial brook trout Salvelinus fontinalis populations in the Lake Superior basin have suffered declines over the last century due to habitat degradation and exploitation. Natural resources agencies throughout the basin have restored habitat and implemented restrictive angling regulations as tools to protect remnant coaster brook trout populations, but the success of these practices is unknown in some locations. We used electrofishing and passive integrated transponder (PIT) tag movement data from 2008 to 2020 to describe population characteristics, temporal trends, and adfluvial life history of coaster brook trout in Washington Harbor, Isle Royale National Park, Lake Superior after implementation of catch-and-release regulations in 2004. Our results document the presence of an adfluvial coaster brook trout population in Washington Harbor, Isle Royale. Temporal trends indicate that brook trout abundance and distribution in Washington Harbor increased since earlier observations in the late 1990s and early 2000s likely due to enactment of protective regulations, and increased stream flows and water levels observed in recent years in both Washington Creek and Lake Superior, respectively. Annual tag detection of Washington Harbor brook trout in Washington Creek at the antenna arrays varied from 25% in 2009 to 100% in 2011 and 2013, and averaged 60.7% throughout the study. Peak in adfluvial brook trout use of Washington Creek was from August – October with few detections occurring outside of the presumed spawning period. This study provides valuable insight into the population characteristics, movement patterns, and temporal increase in abundance of an adfluvial brook trout population in Lake Superior.

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