Michigan Department of Natural Resources
Fisheries Research Report No.1800,1973

Changes in Fish Species Composition in the Au Sable River, Michigan, from the 1920's To 1972


John Scott Richards


      Abstract.-An ichthyological survey was made of the Au Sable River and it; tributaries, as part of a broader study of current economic developments within the watershed and the capacity of the river to absorb the impact of an increase in human population and the accompanying exploitation of resources, without undue deterioration of environmental quality. Fishes have an important role in recreation, and the composition of the fauna will reflect changes due to environmental abuse such as reduced water flow, increase in temperature, chemical pollution, over-enrichment by nutrients, over-fishing, and others. Fortunately a careful fish survey was made on the river about 50 years ago by Carl L. Hubbs and associates. I repeated the same survey during the summer of 1972, duplicating the gear, river sites, dates and time, as closely as possible. Collections taken in 1972 were compared with the Hubbs' collections by three approaches: (1) a species analysis, (2) a faunal resemblance index, and (3) species diversity; the latter two involve statistical procedures. Hubbs took 45 species; I took 44; 37 species were the same. Judging from abundance of coldwater species and from the. statistical indices, the river system has improved as "trout water" in the central cold-water area: the lower half of the North Branch and Big Creek, the lower half of the South Branch, and the Main Stream from Grayling to the South Branch. On the other hand, quality of trout water has deteriorated above Grayling in both Main Stream and East Branch, in the headwaters of the North Branch, and from Cooke Pond downstream. Most of the river from the South Branch to Cooke Pond has changed little as trout water. For the immediate future, measures which would lower the water temperature during summer months would be favorable to trout fishing, especially in those stream segments where there has been some deterioration during the last 50 years.