Shifting trophic control of fishery-ecosystem dynamics following biological invasions

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Shifting trophic control of fishery-ecosystem dynamics following biological invasions. / Goto, Daisuke; Dunlop, Erin S; Young, Joelle D et al.
In: Ecological Applications, Vol. 30, No. 8, e02190, 01.12.2020.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Goto, D, Dunlop, ES, Young, JD & Jackson, DA 2020, 'Shifting trophic control of fishery-ecosystem dynamics following biological invasions', Ecological Applications, vol. 30, no. 8, e02190. https://doi.org/10.1002/eap.2190

APA

Goto, D., Dunlop, E. S., Young, J. D., & Jackson, D. A. (2020). Shifting trophic control of fishery-ecosystem dynamics following biological invasions. Ecological Applications, 30(8), Article e02190. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1002/eap.2190

CBE

Goto D, Dunlop ES, Young JD, Jackson DA. 2020. Shifting trophic control of fishery-ecosystem dynamics following biological invasions. Ecological Applications. 30(8):Article e02190. https://doi.org/10.1002/eap.2190

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Goto D, Dunlop ES, Young JD, Jackson DA. Shifting trophic control of fishery-ecosystem dynamics following biological invasions. Ecological Applications. 2020 Dec 1;30(8):e02190. Epub 2020 Dec 1. doi: 10.1002/eap.2190

Author

Goto, Daisuke ; Dunlop, Erin S ; Young, Joelle D et al. / Shifting trophic control of fishery-ecosystem dynamics following biological invasions. In: Ecological Applications. 2020 ; Vol. 30, No. 8.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Shifting trophic control of fishery-ecosystem dynamics following biological invasions

AU - Goto, Daisuke

AU - Dunlop, Erin S

AU - Young, Joelle D

AU - Jackson, Donald A

N1 - © 2020 The Authors. Ecological Applications published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Ecological Society of America.

PY - 2020/12/1

Y1 - 2020/12/1

N2 - Increasing human population size and mobility have accelerated the translocation of nonnative species globally, which has become a major threat to conservation of biodiversity and ecosystem services. Introduced species can disrupt species interactions of the recipient ecosystem, triggering system-wide events, and amplify or dampen effects of existing pressures. We show how two pervasive intercontinental invasive consumers in North American lakes, dreissenids (filter-feeding mussels) and Bythotrephes (carnivorous zooplankton), nonlinearly modify consumer-resource dynamics and undermine management interventions to rebuild cold-water predatory fish biomass. Synthesizing 30 yr (1986-2015) of lake-wide monitoring data with a dynamic mass-balance food-web model (consisting of 61 species and trophic groups), we reconstructed historical food-web dynamics of Lake Simcoe, a large, temperate lake in Ontario, Canada that has shifted from a turbid to clear-water state. We then analyzed patterns of biomass fluctuations of three recreationally harvested, ecologically connected populations; lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush, a piscivore), lake whitefish (Coregonus clupeaformis, a benthivore), and cisco (C. artedi, a planktivore) before and after the invasions by testing hypotheses on their delayed recoveries under management interventions-predator manipulations (fishery removal and stocking) and nutrient (phosphorus) load reduction. Analyses suggest that fishery harvest primarily regulated early recovery trajectories of the piscivore and planktivore, weakening top-down control prior to the establishment of the invasive consumers. By contrast, the benthivore biomass patterns were shaped, in part, by the invasive mussels (via diet shift), independently of management actions. Although improved water quality (with reduced hypoxia in deeper water) and, in turn, higher macrophyte production are projected to expand the predation refuge for young fish, intensified planktivory (by Bythotrephes) and herbivory (by dreissenids) have triggered shifts in community composition (from pelagic to demersal dominance). These system-wide shifts, in turn, have substantially diminished ecosystem productivity, thereby shrinking fishery yields. Novel consumers can rewire food webs, disrupt energy flows, and suppress predator recoveries, underscoring the need to account for altered ecological reality when sustainably managing fishery resources in invaded ecosystems.

AB - Increasing human population size and mobility have accelerated the translocation of nonnative species globally, which has become a major threat to conservation of biodiversity and ecosystem services. Introduced species can disrupt species interactions of the recipient ecosystem, triggering system-wide events, and amplify or dampen effects of existing pressures. We show how two pervasive intercontinental invasive consumers in North American lakes, dreissenids (filter-feeding mussels) and Bythotrephes (carnivorous zooplankton), nonlinearly modify consumer-resource dynamics and undermine management interventions to rebuild cold-water predatory fish biomass. Synthesizing 30 yr (1986-2015) of lake-wide monitoring data with a dynamic mass-balance food-web model (consisting of 61 species and trophic groups), we reconstructed historical food-web dynamics of Lake Simcoe, a large, temperate lake in Ontario, Canada that has shifted from a turbid to clear-water state. We then analyzed patterns of biomass fluctuations of three recreationally harvested, ecologically connected populations; lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush, a piscivore), lake whitefish (Coregonus clupeaformis, a benthivore), and cisco (C. artedi, a planktivore) before and after the invasions by testing hypotheses on their delayed recoveries under management interventions-predator manipulations (fishery removal and stocking) and nutrient (phosphorus) load reduction. Analyses suggest that fishery harvest primarily regulated early recovery trajectories of the piscivore and planktivore, weakening top-down control prior to the establishment of the invasive consumers. By contrast, the benthivore biomass patterns were shaped, in part, by the invasive mussels (via diet shift), independently of management actions. Although improved water quality (with reduced hypoxia in deeper water) and, in turn, higher macrophyte production are projected to expand the predation refuge for young fish, intensified planktivory (by Bythotrephes) and herbivory (by dreissenids) have triggered shifts in community composition (from pelagic to demersal dominance). These system-wide shifts, in turn, have substantially diminished ecosystem productivity, thereby shrinking fishery yields. Novel consumers can rewire food webs, disrupt energy flows, and suppress predator recoveries, underscoring the need to account for altered ecological reality when sustainably managing fishery resources in invaded ecosystems.

KW - Animals

KW - Ecosystem

KW - Fisheries

KW - Food Chain

KW - Humans

KW - Introduced Species

KW - Lakes

KW - Ontario

U2 - 10.1002/eap.2190

DO - 10.1002/eap.2190

M3 - Article

C2 - 32506720

VL - 30

JO - Ecological Applications

JF - Ecological Applications

SN - 1051-0761

IS - 8

M1 - e02190

ER -