4.6 Article

Effects of waterfowl and fish on submerged vegetation and macroinvertebrates

Journal

FRESHWATER BIOLOGY
Volume 47, Issue 11, Pages 2049-2059

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2427.2002.00949.x

Keywords

benthivorous fish; benthos; food reduction; herbivorous birds; submerged macrophytes

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1. With the aim to assess the combined and separate effects of waterfowl and fish on submerged vegetation and macroinvertebrates, we performed a replicated selective exclosure study in a shallow, eutrophic lake in southern Sweden. Our results are presented together with a literature review of the effects of fish and waterfowl on macroinvertebrates and submerged vegetation. 2. Based on our experiment and on published data, we conclude that waterfowl normally will reduce submerged vegetation only at high waterfowl densities, at very low vegetation densities, or in the colonisation phase of the vegetation. 3. Further, we conclude that in shallow temperate eutrophic lakes, a naturally occurring mixed fish assemblage rarely reduces submerged vegetation. Unless the vegetation is very sparse, the risk of severe reduction of submerged vegetation as a result of waterfowl or fish grazing, should thereby be low. 4. Even relatively low densities of fish seem to reduce macroinvertebrate biomass, while a mixed waterfowl assemblage rarely has a significant effect on macroinvertebrate biomass.

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