Dispersal of aquatic invertebrates by lesser black-backed gulls and white storks within and between inland habitats

: Waterbirds can transport aquatic invertebrates internally, contributing to metapopulation dynamics between aquatic habitats in a terrestrial matrix. However, research into this dispersal process to date has focused on individual field sites, or laboratory studies. We investigated the invertebrates...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Martín-Vélez, Víctor, Sánchez, Marta I., Lovas-Kiss, Ádám, Hortas, Francisco, Green, Andy J.
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/250117
https://doi.org/10.20350/digitalCSIC/13984
Description
Summary:: Waterbirds can transport aquatic invertebrates internally, contributing to metapopulation dynamics between aquatic habitats in a terrestrial matrix. However, research into this dispersal process to date has focused on individual field sites, or laboratory studies. We investigated the invertebrates dispersed by endozoochory by the lesser black-backed gull Larus fuscus wintering in Andalusia, south-west Spain in 2016-2017, comparing seven sites interconnected by their movements, with different degrees of anthropogenization (three landfills, two saltpan complexes, a lake and a ricefield area). In the ricefields, we also compared gulls with the larger white stork Ciconia ciconia. A total of 642 intact invertebrates and their propagules (mainly plumatellid bryozoans, cladocerans and other branchiopods) were recorded in excreta (faeces and pellets) from gulls and storks. A greater diversity and abundance of invertebrates were recorded in ricefields, notably 43 individuals of the alien snail Physa acuta. One snail was still alive in a gull pellet three weeks after being stored in a fridge. This represents the first record of snail dispersal within waterbird pellets. Viability was also confirmed for the cladoceran Macrothrix rosea recorded in ricefields, and the alien brine shrimp Artemia franciscana recorded mainly in saltpans. In ricefields, gulls and pellets had significantly fewer propagules and fewer taxa than storks and faeces respectively.Through their high mobility, gulls and storks can disperse invertebrates between different natural and artificial habitats, and even to landfills. They can promote metapopulation dynamics for native bryozoans and branchiopods, but also the spread of invasive snails and brine shrimp. Peer reviewed