� 1999, by the American Society of Limnology and Oceanography, Inc. Restoration of the food web of an alpine lake following fish stocking

Trout stocking in the mid-1960s eliminated the calanoid copepod Hesperodiaptomus arcticus and other largebodied crustaceans such as Gammarus lacustris, Daphnia middendorffiana, and Daphnia pulex from many alpine lakes in the Rocky Mountain Parks of Canada. H. arcticus frequently dominates the plankt...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: A. S. Mcnaught, D. W. Schindler, B. R. Parker, A. J. Paul, D. B. Donald, M. Agbeti
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.419.6455
http://www.aslo.org/lo/toc/vol_44/issue_1/0127.pdf
Description
Summary:Trout stocking in the mid-1960s eliminated the calanoid copepod Hesperodiaptomus arcticus and other largebodied crustaceans such as Gammarus lacustris, Daphnia middendorffiana, and Daphnia pulex from many alpine lakes in the Rocky Mountain Parks of Canada. H. arcticus frequently dominates the plankton communities of fishless lakes, preying on rotifers and nauplius larvae. Following the extirpation of H. arcticus, rotifers and small-bodied cyclopoid copepods dominate the zooplankton assemblages of alpine lakes. We studied the zooplankton community of Snowflake Lake, Banff National Park, from 1966 to 1995. H. arcticus was eliminated following stocking of the lake with trout in the 1960s. It failed to become reestablished after the disappearance of the fish population in the mid-1980s. Several species of rotifers and small-bodied crustaceans, species originally rare or absent from the plankton, became abundant following fish stocking and remained so after the fish population declined. In 1992, we reintroduced H. arcticus to Snowflake Lake. The H. arcticus population grew exponentially for 4 yr, but had not reached stable densities typical of unmanipulated alpine lakes by 1995. By 1994, however, even the small population of Hesperodiaptomus was beginning to suppress populations of rotifers, copepod nauplii, and large diatoms. Because H. arcticus is omnivorous, a simple model of cascading trophic interactions did not predict the