Cannibals and parasites: conflicting regulators of bimodality in high latitude Arctic char, Salvelinus alpinus

Unexploited populations of Arctic char ( Salvelinus alpinus ) sampled in autonomous lake ecosystems in northern Svalbard demonstrate extraordinary catch curves with age and size frequency distributions characterized by discrete bimodality. Analyses of size‐age relationship, summer diet and food‐rela...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Oikos
Main Author: Hammar, Johan
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2000
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1034/j.1600-0706.2000.880105.x
https://api.wiley.com/onlinelibrary/tdm/v1/articles/10.1034%2Fj.1600-0706.2000.880105.x
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1034/j.1600-0706.2000.880105.x
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Summary:Unexploited populations of Arctic char ( Salvelinus alpinus ) sampled in autonomous lake ecosystems in northern Svalbard demonstrate extraordinary catch curves with age and size frequency distributions characterized by discrete bimodality. Analyses of size‐age relationship, summer diet and food‐related intestinal parasite intensities of modal char groups revealed a pattern of discrete ontogenetic niche shifts. Life‐history changes at age 10–15 and size 200–300 mm/50–300 g involved shifting from an initial mode of small‐sized, slow‐growing and sexually mature individuals feeding on micro‐crustaceans and aquatic insects (Chironomidae, Trichoptera), to a terminal mode of large‐sized and fast‐growing cannibals. Cannibalism, however, was found to result in accumulation of cestodan parasites, of which Diphyllobothrium ditremum increases age‐related mortality rates and may be lethal at 1500–2000 plerocercoids. Genetically allopatric populations with cannibalism demonstrated a female‐biased sex ratio, primarily in the initial mode, suggesting sexual asynchrony in their ontogeny. By contrast, a small population of large‐sized, non‐cannibalistic Arctic char feeding exclusively on the large amphipod Gammaracanthus lacustris , demonstrated unimodal size and age frequency distribution, faster growth, an excess of males and lower parasite burden. Seasonal prey shortage and slow juvenile growth in association with fitness components favoring large body size is a suggested mechanism for inducing cannibalism. Although not the basic cause of bimodality as such, it is concluded that ontogenetic niche shift by cannibalism reinforces discrete age modal divergence resulting in the numerical preponderance of large‐sized individuals in these marginal char populations. Cannibalism is thus considered an important strategy for survival of landlocked Arctic char in the High Arctic. As a conflicting cost to the more efficient use of available energy by larger individuals, the accumulation of cestodan parasites in cannibals, however, will ...