Data from: Trophic consequences of introduced species: comparative impacts of increased inter-specific versus intra-specific competitive interactions
1. Invasive species can cause substantial ecological impacts on native biodiversity. Whilst ecological theory attempts to explain the processes involved in the trophic integration of invaders into native food webs and their competitive impacts on resident species, results are equivocal. In addition,...
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Zusammenfassung: | 1. Invasive species can cause substantial ecological impacts on native
biodiversity. Whilst ecological theory attempts to explain the processes
involved in the trophic integration of invaders into native food webs and
their competitive impacts on resident species, results are equivocal. In
addition, quantifying the relative strength of impacts from non-native
species (inter-specific competition) versus the release of native
conspecifics (intra-specific competition) is important but rarely
completed. 2. Two model non-native fishes, the globally invasive Cyprinus
carpio and Carassius auratus, and the model native fish Tinca tinca, were
used in a pond experiment to test how increased intra- and inter-specific
competition influenced trophic niches and somatic growth rates. This was
complemented by samples collected from three natural fish communities
where the model fishes were present. The isotopic niche, calculated using
stable isotope data, represented the trophic niche. 3. The pond experiment
used additive and substitutive treatments to quantify the trophic niche
variation that resulted from intra- and inter-specific competitive
interactions. Although the trophic niche sizes of the model species were
not significantly altered by any competitive treatment, they all resulted
in patterns of inter-specific niche divergence. Increased inter-specific
competition caused the trophic niche of T. tinca to shift to a
significantly higher trophic position, whereas intra-specific competition
caused its position to shift towards elevated δ13C. These patterns were
independent of impacts on fish growth rates, which were only significantly
altered when inter-specific competition was elevated. 4. In the natural
fish communities, patterns of trophic niche partitioning between the model
fishes was evident, with no niche sharing. Comparison of these results
with those of the experiment revealed the most similar results between the
two approaches were for the niche partitioning between sympatric T. tinca
and C. carpio. 5. These results indicate that trophic niche divergence
facilitates the integration of introduced species into food webs, but
there are differences in how this manifests between introductions that
increase inter- and intra-specific competition. In entirety, these results
suggest that the initial ecological response to an introduction appears to
be a trophic re-organisation of the food web that minimises the trophic
interactions between competing species. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.qn186 |