Analysis of Three Cisco Forms (Coregonus, Salmonidae) from Lake Saganaga and Adjacent Lakes Near the Minnesota/Ontario Border
Based on examination of 655 ciscoes from Lake Saganaga, a Minnesota/Ontario border lake, three forms, about 90% separable on gill raker counts, are present. Form L, with the lowest gill raker counts (26–40, mean = 31.9, n = 96) is tentatively identified as Coregonus zenithicus. Form M, with intermediate gill raker counts (36–50, mean = 43.1, n = 92) was the only cisco anticipated to occur in lakes of the region and is assumed to represent Coregonus artedi. Form H, with 45–70 gill rakers, mean = 56.1, n = 467, is the most common cisco in the lake. We argue that the appropriate name for this form is Coregonus nipigon. Additional differences among the three forms include lateral-line scale and vertebral counts, gill raker length, body shape, fin pigmentation, size at sexual maturity, and maximum size. Seagull Lake, affluent to Lake Saganaga, contained only C. artedi (n = 108). Gunflint and Magnetic Lakes, also affluents to Lake Saganaga, contained C. artedi (n = 19) and C. zenithicus (n = 29). Lake Saganagons, immediately downstream of Lake Saganaga, based on only eight available specimens, appears to contain C. nipigon (7) and C. artedi (1).Abstract

Map of Lake Saganaga on the Minnesota/Ontario border

Histograms of number of gill rakers for 39 type specimens of Coregonus nipigon and three putative cisco forms from Lake Saganaga on the Minnesota/Ontario border. Data for form M and the type specimens of C. nipigon are displayed below the x-axis for clarity

Plot of number of gill rakers versus standard length for three putative cisco forms from Lake Saganaga on the Minnesota/Ontario border. The equations describe the regression lines through the data

Sheared principal component scores for males of type specimens of Coregonus nipigon and three putative cisco forms from Lake Saganaga on the Minnesota/Ontario border

Sheared principal component scores for females of type specimens of Coregonus nipigon and three putative cisco forms from Lake Saganaga on the Minnesota/Ontario border
Contributor Notes
(DAE) Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee 37996–1610; and (CES) Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences, Georgia College and State University, Milledgeville, Georgia 31061. (DAE)dipnet@utk.edu Send reprint requests to DAE.