Data from: Predicting the ecological impacts of an alien invader: experimental approaches reveal the trophic consequences of competition
1.Ecological theory on the trophic impacts of invasive fauna on native competitors is equivocal. While increased inter‐specific competition can result in coexisting species having constricted and diverged trophic niches, the competing species might instead increase their niche sizes to maintain ener...
Gespeichert in:
Hauptverfasser: | , , , , |
---|---|
Format: | Dataset |
Sprache: | eng |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Volltext bestellen |
Tags: |
Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
|
Zusammenfassung: | 1.Ecological theory on the trophic impacts of invasive fauna on native
competitors is equivocal. While increased inter‐specific competition can
result in coexisting species having constricted and diverged trophic
niches, the competing species might instead increase their niche sizes to
maintain energy intakes. Empirical experiments can test invasion theory on
competitive interactions and niche sizes across different spatial scales
and complexity. 2.The consequences of increased inter‐specific competition
from a model alien fish Leuciscus idus were tested on two taxonomically
and trophically similar native fishes, Squalius cephalus and Barbus
barbus. Competitive interactions were tested in tank aquaria using
comparative functional responses (CFRs) and cohabitation trials. The
consequences of these competitive interactions for the trophic niche sizes
and positions of the fishes were tested in pond mesocosms. 3.CFRs revealed
that compared to B. barbus, L. idus had significantly higher attack and
consumption rates; cohabitation trials revealed B. barbus growth rates
were depressed in sympatry with L. idus. For L. idus and S. cephalus,
differences in their functional response parameters and growth rates were
not significant. 4.Pond mesocosms used stable isotope metrics to quantify
shifts in the trophic niche sizes of the fishes between allopatry and
sympatry using a substitutive experimental design. Isotopic niches were
smaller and more divergent in sympatric paired species than predicted by
their allopatric treatments, suggesting trophic impacts from
inter‐specific competition. However, an all‐species sympatric treatment
revealed similar niche sizes with allopatry. This maintenance of niche
sizes in the presence of all species potentially resulted from the
buffering of direct competitive effects of the species‐pairs by indirect
effects. 5.Experimental predictions from tank aquaria assisted the
interpretation of the constricted and diverged trophic niches detected in
the paired‐species sympatric treatments of the pond mesocosms. However,
the all‐species sympatric treatment of this experiment revealed greater
complexity in the outcomes of the competitive interactions within and
between the species. These results have important implications for
understanding how alien species integrate into food webs and influence the
trophic relationships between native species. |
---|---|
DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.3m5116g |