Consumptive And Non-Consumptive Effects Of Predatory Fishes On Lobster In Southern Maine

The American lobster, Homarus americanus, is an important consumer in the Gulf of Maine benthic community and supports the most valuable fishery in New England. Many fish predators that feed on juvenile lobster are found in the Gulf of Maine, but their abundance has varied over the previous decades....

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Main Author: Wilkinson, Erin B.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: DUNE: DigitalUNE 2013
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Online Access:https://dune.une.edu/theses/105
https://dune.une.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1104&context=theses
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spelling ftunivnewengmai:oai:dune.une.edu:theses-1104 2023-05-15T15:27:40+02:00 Consumptive And Non-Consumptive Effects Of Predatory Fishes On Lobster In Southern Maine Wilkinson, Erin B. 2013-01-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://dune.une.edu/theses/105 https://dune.une.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1104&context=theses unknown DUNE: DigitalUNE https://dune.une.edu/theses/105 https://dune.une.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1104&context=theses © 2013 Erin Wilkinson All Theses And Dissertations Marine Biology text 2013 ftunivnewengmai 2022-01-22T20:14:20Z The American lobster, Homarus americanus, is an important consumer in the Gulf of Maine benthic community and supports the most valuable fishery in New England. Many fish predators that feed on juvenile lobster are found in the Gulf of Maine, but their abundance has varied over the previous decades. For example, striped bass, Morone saxatilis, have recovered from near extinction to become a viable recreational fishery on the east coast, and previous work examining the gut contents of striped bass found that juvenile lobsters were a large component of their diet during the summer in Massachusetts. However, striped bass diet has not been examined extensively in the Gulf of Maine and this raises questions as to how important lobster may be to striped bass diet in southern Maine coastal waters. There are also many management strategies in place to help restore other fish species known to consume juvenile lobster, such as Atlantic cod, to the Gulf of Maine. It has been suggested that the abundance of lobster may be inversely related to the abundance of coastal groundfish in the Gulf of Maine. In addition to consumptive effects through feeding activity these predators may also have non-consumptive effects on their targeted prey species by causing lobster to alter their behaviors. It is unclear what consumptive and non-consumptive effects the return of these large fish predators may be having on juvenile lobster in the Gulf of Maine. Chapter 1 examines the food habits of striped bass in Southern Maine coastal waters, with an emphasis on how important lobster is to their diet. Using stomach contents and stable isotope analysis I found that for all sizes of striped bass small pelagic fish species made of the majority of diet, and for large and extra-large fish crustaceans (lobster) were found more often than in the stomachs of smaller fish. Stable isotope analysis revealed that larger striped bass expressed stronger benthic signals of δ13C, indicating that prey such as lobsters are more important to larger striped bass diet in Southern Maine than stomach contents revealed. The 2nd chapter presented here examines what sizes of juvenile lobsters are most susceptible to predation, and how juvenile lobster anti-predator response varies among different predators (striped bass, cod, and sea raven). I found that small lobsters (<45mm carapace length) are most susceptible to predation, and observed that the strength of anti-predator responses displayed by lobster varied with predator type. Lobsters reacted to the presence of Atlantic cod or sea raven by decreasing activity levels and increasing shelter use, but did not alter behavior in the presence of striped bass. This varying level of response seems consistent with differences in predator foraging modality. Taken together, the results of these two studies can be used to increase our understanding of what long term consumptive and non-consumptive effects can be expected for juvenile lobsters in southern Maine if we continue to see the return of large fish to this region. Text atlantic cod University of New England: DUNE (DigitalUNE)
institution Open Polar
collection University of New England: DUNE (DigitalUNE)
op_collection_id ftunivnewengmai
language unknown
topic Marine Biology
spellingShingle Marine Biology
Wilkinson, Erin B.
Consumptive And Non-Consumptive Effects Of Predatory Fishes On Lobster In Southern Maine
topic_facet Marine Biology
description The American lobster, Homarus americanus, is an important consumer in the Gulf of Maine benthic community and supports the most valuable fishery in New England. Many fish predators that feed on juvenile lobster are found in the Gulf of Maine, but their abundance has varied over the previous decades. For example, striped bass, Morone saxatilis, have recovered from near extinction to become a viable recreational fishery on the east coast, and previous work examining the gut contents of striped bass found that juvenile lobsters were a large component of their diet during the summer in Massachusetts. However, striped bass diet has not been examined extensively in the Gulf of Maine and this raises questions as to how important lobster may be to striped bass diet in southern Maine coastal waters. There are also many management strategies in place to help restore other fish species known to consume juvenile lobster, such as Atlantic cod, to the Gulf of Maine. It has been suggested that the abundance of lobster may be inversely related to the abundance of coastal groundfish in the Gulf of Maine. In addition to consumptive effects through feeding activity these predators may also have non-consumptive effects on their targeted prey species by causing lobster to alter their behaviors. It is unclear what consumptive and non-consumptive effects the return of these large fish predators may be having on juvenile lobster in the Gulf of Maine. Chapter 1 examines the food habits of striped bass in Southern Maine coastal waters, with an emphasis on how important lobster is to their diet. Using stomach contents and stable isotope analysis I found that for all sizes of striped bass small pelagic fish species made of the majority of diet, and for large and extra-large fish crustaceans (lobster) were found more often than in the stomachs of smaller fish. Stable isotope analysis revealed that larger striped bass expressed stronger benthic signals of δ13C, indicating that prey such as lobsters are more important to larger striped bass diet in Southern Maine than stomach contents revealed. The 2nd chapter presented here examines what sizes of juvenile lobsters are most susceptible to predation, and how juvenile lobster anti-predator response varies among different predators (striped bass, cod, and sea raven). I found that small lobsters (<45mm carapace length) are most susceptible to predation, and observed that the strength of anti-predator responses displayed by lobster varied with predator type. Lobsters reacted to the presence of Atlantic cod or sea raven by decreasing activity levels and increasing shelter use, but did not alter behavior in the presence of striped bass. This varying level of response seems consistent with differences in predator foraging modality. Taken together, the results of these two studies can be used to increase our understanding of what long term consumptive and non-consumptive effects can be expected for juvenile lobsters in southern Maine if we continue to see the return of large fish to this region.
format Text
author Wilkinson, Erin B.
author_facet Wilkinson, Erin B.
author_sort Wilkinson, Erin B.
title Consumptive And Non-Consumptive Effects Of Predatory Fishes On Lobster In Southern Maine
title_short Consumptive And Non-Consumptive Effects Of Predatory Fishes On Lobster In Southern Maine
title_full Consumptive And Non-Consumptive Effects Of Predatory Fishes On Lobster In Southern Maine
title_fullStr Consumptive And Non-Consumptive Effects Of Predatory Fishes On Lobster In Southern Maine
title_full_unstemmed Consumptive And Non-Consumptive Effects Of Predatory Fishes On Lobster In Southern Maine
title_sort consumptive and non-consumptive effects of predatory fishes on lobster in southern maine
publisher DUNE: DigitalUNE
publishDate 2013
url https://dune.une.edu/theses/105
https://dune.une.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1104&context=theses
genre atlantic cod
genre_facet atlantic cod
op_source All Theses And Dissertations
op_relation https://dune.une.edu/theses/105
https://dune.une.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1104&context=theses
op_rights © 2013 Erin Wilkinson
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