Nonnative trout impact an alpineânesting bird by altering aquaticâinsect subsidies
Adjacent food webs may be linked by crossâboundary subsidies: moreâproductive donor systems can subsidize consumers in lessâproductive neighboring recipient systems. Introduced species are known to have direct effects on organisms within invaded communities. However, few studies have addressed...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Ecology (Durham) 2010, Vol.91 (8), p.2406-2415 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Adjacent food webs may be linked by crossâboundary subsidies: moreâproductive donor systems can subsidize consumers in lessâproductive neighboring recipient systems. Introduced species are known to have direct effects on organisms within invaded communities. However, few studies have addressed the indirect effects of nonnative species in donor systems on organisms in recipient systems. We studied the direct role of introduced trout in altering a lakeâderived resource subsidy and their indirect effects in altering a passerine bird's response to that subsidy. We compared the abundance of aquatic insects and foraging Grayâcrowned RosyâFinches (Leucosticte tephrocotis dawsoni, âRosyâFinchâ) at fishâcontaining vs. fishless lakes in the Sierra Nevada Mountains of California (USA). Introduced trout outcompeted RosyâFinches for emerging aquatic insects (i.e., mayflies). Fishâcontaining lakes had 98% fewer mayflies than did fishless lakes. In lakes without fish, RosyâFinches showed an aggregative response to emerging aquatic insects with 5.9 times more RosyâFinches at fishless lakes than at fishâcontaining lakes. Therefore, the introduction of nonnative fish into the donor system reduced both the magnitude of the resource subsidy and the strength of crossâboundary trophic interactions. Importantly, the timing of the subsidy occurs when RosyâFinches feed their young. If RosyâFinches rely on aquaticâinsect subsidies to fledge their young, reductions in the subsidy by introduced trout may have decreased RosyâFinch abundances from historic levels. We recommend that terrestrial recipients of aquatic subsidies be included in conservation and restoration plans for ecosystems with alpine lakes. |
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ISSN: | 0012-9658 1939-9170 |