4.6 Article

Mobile piscivores and the nature of top-down forcing in Upper Amazonian floodplain lakes

Journal

HYDROBIOLOGIA
Volume 848, Issue 2, Pages 431-443

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10750-020-04451-3

Keywords

Amazon; Birds; Caiman; Floodplain lakes; Giant otter; Lake type; Perú Predation; Piscivores

Funding

  1. National Geographic Society [8672-09]
  2. Royster Society (University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill)
  3. H.V. Wilson Research grant (UNC-Chapel Hill)
  4. Conservation Food and Health Foundation
  5. Disney Conservation Foundation
  6. Idea Wild

Ask authors/readers for more resources

By studying the populations of different predators in floodplain lakes in Peru's Manu National Park, it was found that giant otters have a higher energy requirement and are the dominant piscivore in lakes with resident families. The roles of other groups like birds and caimans still require further investigation, and lakes occupied by otters may be more productive based on indirect evidence.
Shallow lakes can change states in response to manipulations of top predators. In most reported experiments, the top piscivore has been a fish. However, low-latitude lakes typically support non-piscine piscivores, including mammals, birds, and reptiles. The roles of these groups have been little investigated, and whether they are more important as piscivores than fish remains unknown. We report both a longitudinal (2001-2018) and a cross-sectional (2012) study of the bird, caiman, and giant otter populations of floodplain lakes in Peru's Manu National Park. We compare the three groups, after removing the effects of taxonomic status and body mass, using allometric equations to estimate the field metabolic rate (FMR) for each group in each lake. Giant otters emerge as the dominant piscivore in lakes that support a resident family, with an energy requirement more than twice that of piscivorous birds and more than seven times that of caiman. However, giant otters were resident in only eight of 27 surveyed lakes. Indirect evidence suggests that these eight lakes are more productive than lakes not occupied by otters. The fact that lakes occupied by otters are dominated by phytoplankton suggests an underlying five-tiered trophic structure in keeping with the prominence of alternating levels in the structure of food webs.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available