Prior exposure to weathered oil influences foraging of an ecologically important saltmarsh resident fish

Estuarine ecosystem balance typically relies on strong food web interconnectedness dependent on a relatively low number of resident taxa, presenting a potential ecological vulnerability to extreme ecosystem disturbances. Following the (DwH) oil spill disaster of the northern Gulf of Mexico (USA), nu...

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Veröffentlicht in:PeerJ (San Francisco, CA) CA), 2022-01, Vol.9, p.e12593-e12593, Article e12593
Hauptverfasser: McDonald, Ashley M, Martin, Charles W, Rieucau, Guillaume, Roberts, Brian J
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Estuarine ecosystem balance typically relies on strong food web interconnectedness dependent on a relatively low number of resident taxa, presenting a potential ecological vulnerability to extreme ecosystem disturbances. Following the (DwH) oil spill disaster of the northern Gulf of Mexico (USA), numerous ecotoxicological studies showed severe species-level impacts of oil exposure on estuarine fish and invertebrates, yet post-spill surveys found little evidence for severe impacts to coastal populations, communities, or food webs. The acknowledgement that several confounding factors may have limited researchers' abilities to detect negative ecosystem-level impacts following the DwH spill drives the need for direct testing of weathered oil exposure effects on estuarine residents with high trophic connectivity. Here, we describe an experiment that examined the influence of previous exposure to four weathered oil concentrations (control: 0.0 L oil m ; low: 0.1 L oil m ; moderate: 0.5-1 L oil m ; high: 3.0 L oil m ) on foraging rates of the ecologically important Gulf killifish ( ). Following exposure in oiled saltmarsh mesocosms, killifish were allowed to forage on grass shrimp ( ) for up to 21 h. We found that previous exposure to the high oil treatment reduced killifish foraging rate by ~37% on average, compared with no oil control treatment. Previous exposure to the moderate oil treatment showed highly variable foraging rate responses, while low exposure treatment was similar to unexposed responses. Declining foraging rate responses to previous high weathered oil exposure suggests potential oil spill influence on energy transfer between saltmarsh and off-marsh systems. Additionally, foraging rate variability at the moderate level highlights the large degree of intraspecific variability for this sublethal response and indicates this concentration represents a potential threshold of oil exposure influence on killifish foraging. We also found that consumption of gravid non-gravid shrimp was not independent of prior oil exposure concentration, as high oil exposure treatment killifish consumed ~3× more gravid shrimp than expected. Our study findings highlight the sublethal effects of prior oil exposure on foraging abilities of ecologically valuable Gulf killifish at realistic oil exposure levels, suggesting that important trophic transfers of energy to off-marsh systems may have been impacted, at least in the short-term, by shoreline oiling at highly localized s
ISSN:2167-8359
2167-8359
DOI:10.7717/peerj.12593