Critical assessment and ramifications of a purported marine trophic cascade

When identifying potential trophic cascades, it is important to clearly establish the trophic linkages between predators and prey with respect to temporal abundance, demographics, distribution, and diet. In the northwest Atlantic Ocean, the depletion of large coastal sharks was thought to trigger a...

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Published in:Scientific Reports
Other Authors: Grubbs, R. Dean (authoraut), Carlson, John K. (authoraut), Romine, Jason G. (authoraut), Curtis, Tobey H. (authoraut), McElroy, W. David (authoraut), McCandless, Camilla T. (authoraut), Cotton, Charles F. (authoraut), Musick, John A. (authoraut)
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Language:English
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/srep20970
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spelling ftfloridastunidc:oai:fsu.digital.flvc.org:fsu_400921 2023-05-15T17:45:40+02:00 Critical assessment and ramifications of a purported marine trophic cascade Grubbs, R. Dean (authoraut) Carlson, John K. (authoraut) Romine, Jason G. (authoraut) Curtis, Tobey H. (authoraut) McElroy, W. David (authoraut) McCandless, Camilla T. (authoraut) Cotton, Charles F. (authoraut) Musick, John A. (authoraut) 1 online resource computer application/pdf https://doi.org/10.1038/srep20970 http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/FSU_libsubv1_wos_000370055800001 http://fsu.digital.flvc.org/islandora/object/fsu%3A400921/datastream/TN/view/Critical%20assessment%20and%20ramifications%20of%20a%20purported%20marine%20trophic%20cascade.jpg English eng eng Scientific Reports--2045-2322 Text ftfloridastunidc https://doi.org/10.1038/srep20970 2020-08-10T18:33:02Z When identifying potential trophic cascades, it is important to clearly establish the trophic linkages between predators and prey with respect to temporal abundance, demographics, distribution, and diet. In the northwest Atlantic Ocean, the depletion of large coastal sharks was thought to trigger a trophic cascade whereby predation release resulted in increased cownose ray abundance, which then caused increased predation on and subsequent collapse of commercial bivalve stocks. These claims were used to justify the development of a predator-control fishery for cownose rays, the "Save the Bay, Eat a Ray" fishery, to reduce predation on commercial bivalves. A reexamination of data suggests declines in large coastal sharks did not coincide with purported rapid increases in cownose ray abundance. Likewise, the increase in cownose ray abundance did not coincide with declines in commercial bivalves. The lack of temporal correlations coupled with published diet data suggest the purported trophic cascade is lacking the empirical linkages required of a trophic cascade. Furthermore, the life history parameters of cownose rays suggest they have low reproductive potential and their populations are incapable of rapid increases. Hypothesized trophic cascades should be closely scrutinized as spurious conclusions may negatively influence conservation and management decisions. argopecten-irradians-concentricus, cownose ray, ecological consequences, food-habits, gulf-of-mexico, lower chesapeake bay, population-dynamics, recruitment limitation, relative abundance, rhinoptera-bonasus The publisher’s version of record is available at http://www.dx.doi.org/10.1038/srep20970 Text Northwest Atlantic Florida State University Digital Library (FSUDL) Scientific Reports 6 1
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description When identifying potential trophic cascades, it is important to clearly establish the trophic linkages between predators and prey with respect to temporal abundance, demographics, distribution, and diet. In the northwest Atlantic Ocean, the depletion of large coastal sharks was thought to trigger a trophic cascade whereby predation release resulted in increased cownose ray abundance, which then caused increased predation on and subsequent collapse of commercial bivalve stocks. These claims were used to justify the development of a predator-control fishery for cownose rays, the "Save the Bay, Eat a Ray" fishery, to reduce predation on commercial bivalves. A reexamination of data suggests declines in large coastal sharks did not coincide with purported rapid increases in cownose ray abundance. Likewise, the increase in cownose ray abundance did not coincide with declines in commercial bivalves. The lack of temporal correlations coupled with published diet data suggest the purported trophic cascade is lacking the empirical linkages required of a trophic cascade. Furthermore, the life history parameters of cownose rays suggest they have low reproductive potential and their populations are incapable of rapid increases. Hypothesized trophic cascades should be closely scrutinized as spurious conclusions may negatively influence conservation and management decisions. argopecten-irradians-concentricus, cownose ray, ecological consequences, food-habits, gulf-of-mexico, lower chesapeake bay, population-dynamics, recruitment limitation, relative abundance, rhinoptera-bonasus The publisher’s version of record is available at http://www.dx.doi.org/10.1038/srep20970
author2 Grubbs, R. Dean (authoraut)
Carlson, John K. (authoraut)
Romine, Jason G. (authoraut)
Curtis, Tobey H. (authoraut)
McElroy, W. David (authoraut)
McCandless, Camilla T. (authoraut)
Cotton, Charles F. (authoraut)
Musick, John A. (authoraut)
format Text
title Critical assessment and ramifications of a purported marine trophic cascade
spellingShingle Critical assessment and ramifications of a purported marine trophic cascade
title_short Critical assessment and ramifications of a purported marine trophic cascade
title_full Critical assessment and ramifications of a purported marine trophic cascade
title_fullStr Critical assessment and ramifications of a purported marine trophic cascade
title_full_unstemmed Critical assessment and ramifications of a purported marine trophic cascade
title_sort critical assessment and ramifications of a purported marine trophic cascade
url https://doi.org/10.1038/srep20970
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genre Northwest Atlantic
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op_relation Scientific Reports--2045-2322
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