4.4 Article

Separate and combined effects of habitat-specific fish predation on the survival of invasive and native gammarids

Journal

JOURNAL OF SEA RESEARCH
Volume 64, Issue 3, Pages 369-372

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.seares.2010.05.006

Keywords

Baltic Sea; Interspecific Competition; Gammarus salinus; Gammarus tigrinus; Nonindigenous; Predation

Funding

  1. Estonian Ministry of Education [SF0180013s08]
  2. Estonian Science Foundation [7813, 8254]

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The North-American amphipod Gammarus tigrinus was observed for the first time in the northern Baltic Sea in 2003. The invasive amphipod has been particularly successful in some habitats (e.g. on pebbles) where it has become one of the most abundant gammarid species. We studied experimentally if the dominant fish Gasterosteus aculeatus preyed differentially on the exotic G. tigrinus and the native Gammarus salinus, if predation differed among habitats, and if one gammarid species facilitated predation on the other. The experiment demonstrated that (1) fish preyed more on the exotic G. tigrinus than the native G. salinus. (2) Predation did not differ among habitats. (3) Gammarus tigrinus facilitated the predation on G. salinus and this facilitation varied among habitats with significant effects on pebbles. Thus, the combined effect of habitat-specific fish predation and competition between gammarid amphipods is a possible explanation of the current range of G. tigrinus in the northern Baltic Sea. G. tigrinus seems to establish in habitats where it can significantly increase fish predation on the native gammarids. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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