Burbot ( Lota lota), are native Lake Superior piscivores that share similar habitat and food resources with other predators including lean and siscowet lake trout ( Salvelinus namaycush). To better understand their ecological role in the fish community, we combined fisheries assessment information from 1970 to 2002 with a bioenergetics model to estimate their predatory impact in the Apostle Islands region of Lake Superior. Relative abundance declined in the Apostle Islands region from 3.41 fish/1,000 m in 1978 to 0.27 fish/1,000 m in 1998. Fishing mortality was minimal based on creel estimates and observed bycatch in the commercial fishery. Burbot < 400 mm consumed a higher fraction of small prey items such as Mysis relicta, fish eggs and sculpins ( Cottidae) while larger burbot were almost exclusively piscivorous. Overall diet composition ( by mass) was represented primarily by Coregonus spp. (64%) and rainbow smelt ( Osmerus mordax) (17%). We estimated the burbot population size in the Apostle Islands between 1970 and 2000 at 56,541 to 1,585,035 age 1+ fish. This population consumed between 56 and 1,584 metric tonnes (0.13 to 3.54 kg/ha) of prey. Increases in both lean and siscowet lake trout abundance have likely contributed to the decline in burbot abundance through predation and/or competition for food resources. Given the current burbot population in the Apostle Islands, this species is unlikely to control production of prey fish or invertebrate taxa.