Food web structure of the Lake Superior fish community in 2021–2022
The trophic linkages and ecological requirements of the Lake Superior fish community have not been assessed on a whole lake scale in over a decade. Here, we investigated the trophic dynamics across multiple species and habitat zones of Lake Superior. From April to October of 2021 and 2022, a total o...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of Great Lakes research 2024-11, p.102486, Article 102486 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The trophic linkages and ecological requirements of the Lake Superior fish community have not been assessed on a whole lake scale in over a decade. Here, we investigated the trophic dynamics across multiple species and habitat zones of Lake Superior. From April to October of 2021 and 2022, a total of five piscivore, four planktivore, and six benthivore species were collected by region and length class during bottom-trawl, standard gillnet, commercial cisco gillnet, and recreational angler surveys. To assess trophic linkages, stomach contents were measured to estimate biomass consumed and a multivariate analysis was used to assess diet composition by species, length, and region. We found a high degree of interconnectedness in the Lake Superior food web, with Mysis as a critical diet item for most fishes. Native piscivore diets varied by region and with ontogeny. Lake charr were important habitat couplers in the lake, exhibiting a diverse diet and opportunistic foraging strategy. Conversely, Pacific salmon were more restricted in their foraging. Planktivores and benthivores primarily consumed Mysis, with less reliance on Diporeia compared to previous studies. Lake whitefish and cisco were the exception to this pattern, with broader bathymetric depth distributions represented in their diets. We found the food web to be supported by a predominantly native species assemblage, with redundancies at all trophic levels. |
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ISSN: | 0380-1330 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jglr.2024.102486 |