Do non-native invasive fish support elevated lamprey populations?

Summary 1: Managing populations of predators and their prey to achieve conservation or resource management goals is usually technically challenging and frequently socially controversial. This is true even in the simplest ecosystems but can be made much worse when predator–prey relationships are in?u...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Applied Ecology
Main Authors: Inger, Richard, McDonald, Robbie A., Rogowski, David, Jackson, Andrew L., Parnell, Andrew, Preston, S. Jane, Harrod, Chris, Goodwin, Claire, Griffiths, David, Dick, J.T.A., Elwood, Robert W., Newton, Jason, Bearhop, Stuart
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2010
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Online Access:https://pure.qub.ac.uk/en/publications/2f6f5194-0e2a-42e7-95e7-fbc6481cbab0
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2664.2009.01761.x
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Summary:Summary 1: Managing populations of predators and their prey to achieve conservation or resource management goals is usually technically challenging and frequently socially controversial. This is true even in the simplest ecosystems but can be made much worse when predator–prey relationships are in?uenced by complex interactions, such as biological invasions, population trends or animal movements. 2: Lough Neagh in Northern Ireland is a European stronghold for pollan Coregonus autumnalis, a coregonine ?sh and for river lampreyLampetra ?uviatilis, which feeds parasitically as an adult. Both species are of high conservation importance. Lampreys are known to consume pollan but detailed knowledge of their interactions is scant. While pollan is well known to be a landlocked species in Ireland, the life cycle of normally anadromous river lamprey in Lough Neagh has been unclear. The Lough is also a highly perturbed ecosystem, supporting several invasive, non-native ?sh species that have the potential to in?uence lamprey–pollan interactions. 3: We applied stable isotope techniques to resolve both the movement patterns of lamprey and trophic interactions in this complex community. Recognizing that stable isotope studies are often hampered by high-levels of variability and uncertainty in the systems of interest, we employed novel Bayesian mixing models, which incorporate variability and uncertainty. 4: Stable isotope analyses identi?ed troutSalmo trutta and non-native breamAbramis brama as the main items in lamprey diet. Pollan only represented a major food source for lamprey between May and July. 5: Stable isotope ratios of carbon in tissues from 71 adult lamprey showed no evidence of marine carbon sources, strongly suggesting that Lough Neagh is host to a highly unusual, nonanadromous freshwater population. This ?nding marks out the Lough’s lamprey population as of particular scienti?c interest and enhances the conservation signi?cance of this feature of the Lough. 6: Synthesis and applications.Our Bayesian isotopic ...