Generalist invasion in a complex lake food web
Kuparinen, A., Uusi‐Heikkilä, S., Perälä, T., Ercoli, F., Eloranta, A. P., Cremona, F., Nõges, P., Laas, A., & Nõges, T. (2023). Generalist invasion in a complex lake food web. Conservation Science and Practice, 5(6), Article e12931. https://doi.org/10.1111/csp2.12931
Published in
Conservation Science and PracticeAuthors
Date
2023Discipline
Nanoscience CenterAkvaattiset tieteetResurssiviisausyhteisöNanoscience CenterAquatic SciencesSchool of Resource WisdomCopyright
© 2023 The Authors. Conservation Science and Practice published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Society for Conservation Biology.
Invasive species constitute a threat not only to native populations but also to the structure and functioning of entire food webs. Despite being considered as a global problem, only a small number of studies have quantitatively predicted the food web-level consequences of invasions. Here, we use an allometric trophic network model parameterized using empirical data on species body masses and feeding interactions to predict the effects of a possible invasion of Amur sleeper (Perccottus glenii), on a well-studied lake ecosystem. We show that the modeled establishment of Amur sleeper decreased the biomasses of top predator fishes by about 10%–19%. These reductions were largely explained by increased larval competition for food and Amur sleeper predation on fish larvae. In contrast, biomasses of less valued fish of lower trophic positions increased by about 0.4%–9% owing to reduced predation pressure by top piscivores. The predicted impact of Amur sleeper establishment on the biomasses of native fish species vastly exceeded the impacts of current-day fishing pressures.
...
Publisher
John Wiley & SonsISSN Search the Publication Forum
2578-4854Keywords
Publication in research information system
https://converis.jyu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/182758175
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
Related funder(s)
Research Council of FinlandFunding program(s)
Academy Project, AoF; Academy Research Fellow, AoFAdditional information about funding
H2020 European Research Council,Grant/Award Number: COMPLEX-FISH770884; Academy of Finland, Grant/Award Numbers: 317495, 325107, 340901; Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada; Estonian Research Council, Grant/Award Numbers: PSG32, PRG1167, PRG709, MOBJD29; Estonian University of Life Sciences, Grant/Award Number: P190254PKKH; European Union's Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme, Grant/Award Number: TREICLAKE 951963 ...License
Related items
Showing items with similar title or keywords.
-
The ecosystem effects of kelp harvesting in the northeast Atlantic
Pesari, Susanna (2022)Kelppilevämetsät ovat erittäin monimuotoisia kylmien rannikkovesien ekosysteemejä. Kelppilevämetsät tarjoavat monia ekosysteemipalveluita: ne esimerkiksi suojaavat rantoja eroosiolta, ovat tärkeitä perustuotannossa ja ... -
Food-web complexity, consumer behavior, and diet specialism: impacts on ecosystem stability
Perälä, Tommi; Kuisma, Mikael; Uusi-Heikkilä, Silva; Kuparinen, Anna (Springer Nature, 2024)Ecological stability is a fundamental aspect of food web dynamics. In this study, we explore the factors influencing stability in complex ecological networks, characterizing it through biomass oscillations and species ... -
Social learning within and across predator species reduces attacks on novel aposematic prey
Hämäläinen, Liisa; Mappes, Johanna; Rowland, Hannah M.; Teichmann, Marianne; Thorogood, Rose (Wiley-Blackwell, 2020)1. To make adaptive foraging decisions, predators need to gather information about the profitability of prey. As well as learning from prey encounters, recent studies show that predators can learn about prey defences by ... -
Olfactory cues and the value of information : Voles interpret cues differently based on recent predator encounters
Bleicher, Sonny S.; Ylönen, Hannu; Käpylä, Teemu; Haapakoski, Marko (Springer, 2018)Prey strategically respond to the risk of predation by varying their behavior while balancing the tradeoffs of food and safety. We present here an experiment that tests the way the same indirect cues of predation risk are ... -
Colour alone matters : no predator generalization among morphs of an aposematic moth
Rönkä, Katja; De Pasqual, Chiara; Mappes, Johanna; Gordon, Swanne; Rojas Zuluaga, Bibiana (Elsevier Ltd., 2018)Local warning colour polymorphism, frequently observed in aposematic organisms, is evolutionarily puzzling. This is because variation in aposematic signals is expected to be selected against due to predators' difficulties ...