4.6 Article

Spoiled for Choice during Cold Season? Habitat Use and Potential Impacts of the Invasive Silurus glanis L. in a Deep, Large, and Oligotrophic Lake (Lake Maggiore, North Italy)

Journal

WATER
Volume 13, Issue 18, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/w13182549

Keywords

trophic ecology; ecological plasticity; European catfish; pelagic habitat; littoral habitat; commercial fishermen; stomach content analyses; commercial harvest

Funding

  1. IdroLIFE Project [LIFE15 NAT/IT/000823]
  2. Interreg ITA-CH SHARESALMO [599030]

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This study investigated the ecological features of the European catfish in Lake Maggiore and found differences in food selection between littoral and pelagic catfish. Pelagic catfish specialized their diet on three prey fish, while littoral catfish had a more varied diet dominated by crayfish, perch, and roach.
The ecological features of invasive alien species are crucial for their effective management. However, they are often lacking in newly invaded ecosystems. This is the case of the European catfish Silurus glanis L. in Lake Maggiore, where the species is present since 1990, but no scientific information is available on its ecology. To start filling this knowledge gap, 236 catfish (67 cm to 150 cm of total length) were collected, measured, and dissected for stomach content analyses from three localities and in two habitats (littoral vs. pelagic) in late autumn/early winter. The NPUE and BPUE (individuals (N) and biomass (B, in grams) per unit effort (m(2)), respectively) of catfish were generally higher in littoral (NPUE > 0.01; BPUE > 96) than in pelagic habitats (NPUE < 0.009; BPUE < 114), but the catfish had, on average, larger sizes in pelagic habitats. Overall, 581 individual prey items were recorded, belonging to 12 taxa. Pelagic catfish specialized their diet exclusively on three prey fish (coregonids, shad, and roach), whilst the diet of littoral catfish was more variable and dominated by crayfish, perch, and roach. These results highlighted for the first time the interaction of larger catfish with the lake's pelagic food web, and thus possible consequences are discussed, including the potential contrasting role S. glanis may have for the lake's fishery.

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