Spatial Community Ecology, Cannibalism, And The Resilience Of Lake Champlain Forage Fish

Nonnative species and changes in the abiotic environment are current drivers of ecological change around the world. Understanding and forecasting the response of fish populations and communities to these types of changes is the focus of the following research conducted in Lake Champlain. Three gener...

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Main Author: Simonin, Paul
Other Authors: Rudstam,Lars Gosta, Sullivan,Patrick J, Uphoff,Norman Thomas, Kraft,Clifford Elliott
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1813/41003
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spelling ftcornelluniv:oai:ecommons.cornell.edu:1813/41003 2023-05-15T15:32:11+02:00 Spatial Community Ecology, Cannibalism, And The Resilience Of Lake Champlain Forage Fish Simonin, Paul Rudstam,Lars Gosta Sullivan,Patrick J Uphoff,Norman Thomas Kraft,Clifford Elliott 2015-08-17 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/1813/41003 en_US eng bibid: 9255278 https://hdl.handle.net/1813/41003 dissertation or thesis 2015 ftcornelluniv 2020-02-02T14:49:13Z Nonnative species and changes in the abiotic environment are current drivers of ecological change around the world. Understanding and forecasting the response of fish populations and communities to these types of changes is the focus of the following research conducted in Lake Champlain. Three general themes run throughout this work: adaptation to change, fish early life history, and spatial ecology. In the first section of this work, we compared hatch timing, abundance, growth rates, and subsequent survival of age 0 rainbow smelt Osmerus mordax and alewife Alosa pseudoharengus. Rainbow smelt hatched almost a month earlier than alewife. Later hatching individuals of both species grew faster than those hatching earlier. Because cannibalism by rainbow smelt is likely the mortality source for age-0 Rainbow smelt, early hatching may not be advantageous as the overlap between adult and age-0 rainbow smelt is highest early in the season. However, alewife, first found in Lake Champlain in 2003, may increase age 0 rainbow smelt summer mortality. Increased summer mortality in rainbow smelt should, in turn, favor selection for early hatching. Using stable isotopes of C and N, we found that alewife are now a large component of predator diets, and in particular of the diets of Atlantic salmon and walleye. Walleye and rainbow smelt [delta]15N values changed significantly from prealewife [delta]15N values of the late 1990's. These changes represent a preferential switch to feeding on alewife by Atlantic salmon which was likely caused by the distribution patterns of these species. Distribution patterns of adults and age 0 fish were simulated on a daily basis, and subsequent age 0 mortality rates calculated. Rainbow smelt age 0 mortality rates are highest when rainbow smelt adults are abundant and alewife age 0 mortality rates are highest when alewife adults are abundant, allowing the two species to co-exist. Mortality rates were higher under normal temperature regimes, but late-summer mortality rates were higher in our climate change scenario because of increased overlap of adult and age 0 distributions. Our simulation suggests spatial distribution patterns should be accounted for when forecasting the interacting effects of climate change aquatic nonnative species. 2020-08-17 Other/Unknown Material Atlantic salmon Cornell University: eCommons@Cornell
institution Open Polar
collection Cornell University: eCommons@Cornell
op_collection_id ftcornelluniv
language English
description Nonnative species and changes in the abiotic environment are current drivers of ecological change around the world. Understanding and forecasting the response of fish populations and communities to these types of changes is the focus of the following research conducted in Lake Champlain. Three general themes run throughout this work: adaptation to change, fish early life history, and spatial ecology. In the first section of this work, we compared hatch timing, abundance, growth rates, and subsequent survival of age 0 rainbow smelt Osmerus mordax and alewife Alosa pseudoharengus. Rainbow smelt hatched almost a month earlier than alewife. Later hatching individuals of both species grew faster than those hatching earlier. Because cannibalism by rainbow smelt is likely the mortality source for age-0 Rainbow smelt, early hatching may not be advantageous as the overlap between adult and age-0 rainbow smelt is highest early in the season. However, alewife, first found in Lake Champlain in 2003, may increase age 0 rainbow smelt summer mortality. Increased summer mortality in rainbow smelt should, in turn, favor selection for early hatching. Using stable isotopes of C and N, we found that alewife are now a large component of predator diets, and in particular of the diets of Atlantic salmon and walleye. Walleye and rainbow smelt [delta]15N values changed significantly from prealewife [delta]15N values of the late 1990's. These changes represent a preferential switch to feeding on alewife by Atlantic salmon which was likely caused by the distribution patterns of these species. Distribution patterns of adults and age 0 fish were simulated on a daily basis, and subsequent age 0 mortality rates calculated. Rainbow smelt age 0 mortality rates are highest when rainbow smelt adults are abundant and alewife age 0 mortality rates are highest when alewife adults are abundant, allowing the two species to co-exist. Mortality rates were higher under normal temperature regimes, but late-summer mortality rates were higher in our climate change scenario because of increased overlap of adult and age 0 distributions. Our simulation suggests spatial distribution patterns should be accounted for when forecasting the interacting effects of climate change aquatic nonnative species. 2020-08-17
author2 Rudstam,Lars Gosta
Sullivan,Patrick J
Uphoff,Norman Thomas
Kraft,Clifford Elliott
format Other/Unknown Material
author Simonin, Paul
spellingShingle Simonin, Paul
Spatial Community Ecology, Cannibalism, And The Resilience Of Lake Champlain Forage Fish
author_facet Simonin, Paul
author_sort Simonin, Paul
title Spatial Community Ecology, Cannibalism, And The Resilience Of Lake Champlain Forage Fish
title_short Spatial Community Ecology, Cannibalism, And The Resilience Of Lake Champlain Forage Fish
title_full Spatial Community Ecology, Cannibalism, And The Resilience Of Lake Champlain Forage Fish
title_fullStr Spatial Community Ecology, Cannibalism, And The Resilience Of Lake Champlain Forage Fish
title_full_unstemmed Spatial Community Ecology, Cannibalism, And The Resilience Of Lake Champlain Forage Fish
title_sort spatial community ecology, cannibalism, and the resilience of lake champlain forage fish
publishDate 2015
url https://hdl.handle.net/1813/41003
genre Atlantic salmon
genre_facet Atlantic salmon
op_relation bibid: 9255278
https://hdl.handle.net/1813/41003
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