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Invasive crayfish impacts on native fish diet and growth vary with fish life stage
by
Grey, Jonathan
, Wood, Kevin A.
, England, Judy
, Hayes, Richard B.
in
allopatry
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Cambaridae
/ carbon
/ crayfish
/ Crustaceans
/ Diet
/ Ecology
/ Fish
/ Fish diets
/ Freshwater
/ Freshwater & Marine Ecology
/ Growth rate
/ Indigenous species
/ Invasive species
/ Life Sciences
/ Marine & Freshwater Sciences
/ Native species
/ nitrogen
/ Nonnative species
/ Oceanography
/ omnivores
/ Pacifastacus leniusculus
/ Physical growth
/ Predators
/ Research Article
/ Rivers
/ Squalius cephalus
/ Stable isotopes
/ statistical models
/ sympatry
/ Trophic levels
/ United Kingdom
2017
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Invasive crayfish impacts on native fish diet and growth vary with fish life stage
by
Grey, Jonathan
, Wood, Kevin A.
, England, Judy
, Hayes, Richard B.
in
allopatry
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Cambaridae
/ carbon
/ crayfish
/ Crustaceans
/ Diet
/ Ecology
/ Fish
/ Fish diets
/ Freshwater
/ Freshwater & Marine Ecology
/ Growth rate
/ Indigenous species
/ Invasive species
/ Life Sciences
/ Marine & Freshwater Sciences
/ Native species
/ nitrogen
/ Nonnative species
/ Oceanography
/ omnivores
/ Pacifastacus leniusculus
/ Physical growth
/ Predators
/ Research Article
/ Rivers
/ Squalius cephalus
/ Stable isotopes
/ statistical models
/ sympatry
/ Trophic levels
/ United Kingdom
2017
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Invasive crayfish impacts on native fish diet and growth vary with fish life stage
by
Grey, Jonathan
, Wood, Kevin A.
, England, Judy
, Hayes, Richard B.
in
allopatry
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Cambaridae
/ carbon
/ crayfish
/ Crustaceans
/ Diet
/ Ecology
/ Fish
/ Fish diets
/ Freshwater
/ Freshwater & Marine Ecology
/ Growth rate
/ Indigenous species
/ Invasive species
/ Life Sciences
/ Marine & Freshwater Sciences
/ Native species
/ nitrogen
/ Nonnative species
/ Oceanography
/ omnivores
/ Pacifastacus leniusculus
/ Physical growth
/ Predators
/ Research Article
/ Rivers
/ Squalius cephalus
/ Stable isotopes
/ statistical models
/ sympatry
/ Trophic levels
/ United Kingdom
2017
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Invasive crayfish impacts on native fish diet and growth vary with fish life stage
Journal Article
Invasive crayfish impacts on native fish diet and growth vary with fish life stage
2017
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Overview
Assessing the impacts of invasive organisms is a major challenge in ecology. Some widespread invasive species such as crayfish are potential competitors and reciprocal predators of ecologically and recreationally important native fish species. Here, we examine the effects of signal crayfish (
Pacifastacus leniusculus
) on the growth, diet, and trophic position of the chub (
Squalius cephalus
) in four rivers in Britain. Growth rates of 0+ chub were typically lower in sympatric populations with signal crayfish compared with allopatric populations, and this effect could be traced through to 2+ chub in one river. However, growth rates of older chub (5+ to 6+) were typically higher in the presence of crayfish. Sympatry with crayfish resulted in lower chub length-at-age and mass-at-age in half of the rivers sampled, with no change detected in the other rivers. Stable isotope analyses (δ
13
C and δ
15
N) revealed that both chub and crayfish were omnivorous, feeding at multiple trophic levels and occupying similar trophic positions. We found some evidence that chub trophic position was greater at invaded sites on one river, with no difference detected on a second river. Mixing models suggested crayfish were important food items for both small and large chub at invaded sites. This study provides evidence that invasive species can have both positive and negative effects on different life stages of a native species, with the net impact likely to depend on responses at the population level.
Publisher
Springer International Publishing,Springer Nature B.V
Subject
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ carbon
/ crayfish
/ Diet
/ Ecology
/ Fish
/ Marine & Freshwater Sciences
/ nitrogen
/ Rivers
/ sympatry
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