4.3 Article

Rainbow smelt population responses to species invasions and change in environmental condition

Journal

JOURNAL OF GREAT LAKES RESEARCH
Volume 47, Issue 4, Pages 1171-1181

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jglr.2021.04.008

Keywords

Alewife; Demographics; Resource competition; Oxythermal habitat availability; Predation

Funding

  1. VTDEC
  2. NYDEC
  3. Lake Champlain Basin Program
  4. Lake Champlain Sea Grant from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration National Sea Grant College Program, U.S. Department of Commerce [NA18OAR4170099]
  5. Great Lakes Fishery Commission

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The study found that the growth of alewife and rainbow smelt in different lakes is influenced by factors such as lake volume, nutrient levels, and predator abundance, with changes in catch-per-unit-effort (CPUE) in some lakes primarily attributed to increased fish mortality. The coexistence of the invasive species alewife and the native species rainbow smelt may be related to system volume and oxythermal habitat availability.
Invasive species can cause major disruptions in native food webs, yet the impact of species introductions and whether they will become invasive appears to be context-dependent. Rainbow smelt and alewife coexist as invasive species in the Laurentian Great Lakes and as native species on the Atlantic coast of North America, but in Lake Champlain rainbow smelt is the dominant native forage fish and alewife are invasive. Alewife became abundant by 2007, providing an opportunity to explore the dynamics of these two species in a system where only one is invasive. We used data from a 28-year forage fish survey to compare demographics of rainbow smelt populations in three basins of Lake Champlain with different volumes, nutrient levels, and predator abundances. Rainbow smelt catch-per-unit-effort (CPUE) remained constant in the large, deep Main Lake before and after alewife invaded, but decreased in the two smaller basins. Declines were primarily a result of increased age-0 and age-1 mortality. Predation by top piscivores, system productivity, and competition for resources alone could not explain the patterns in CPUE across the basins. The mechanisms that allow alewife and rainbow smelt to co-exist could be related to system volume and oxythermal habitat availability, and may explain why the two species do not negatively affect each other in the Great Lakes. Summer hypoxia in the smaller basins could force individuals into smaller habitat volumes with higher densities of competitors and cannibalistic adult rainbow smelt. Habitat availability may mediate the impact of invasive alewife on native rainbow smelt. (C) 2021 International Association for Great Lakes Research. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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