4.7 Article

Limitation and facilitation of one of the world's most invasive fish: an intercontinental comparison

Journal

ECOLOGY
Volume 94, Issue 2, Pages 356-367

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1890/12-0628.1

Keywords

bioenergetics; brown trout; conservation; diet; distribution; exotic; fish growth; invasion; life history; metabolism; piscivory; Salmo trutta

Categories

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation ADVANCE Program
  2. Utah Division of Wildlife Resources [F-47-R]
  3. U.S. Geological Survey-Utah Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit
  4. Department of Watershed Sciences and Ecology Center at Utah State University

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Purposeful species introductions offer opportunities to inform our understanding of both invasion success and conservation hurdles. We evaluated factors determining the energetic limitations of brown trout (Salmo trutta) in both their native and introduced ranges. Our focus was on brown trout because they are nearly globally distributed, considered one of the world's worst invaders, yet imperiled in much of their native habitat. We synthesized and compared data describing temperature regime, diet, growth, and maximum body size across multiple spatial and temporal scales, from country (both exotic and native habitats) and major geographic area (MGA) to rivers and years within MGA. Using these data as inputs, we next used bioenergetic efficiency (BioEff), a relative scalar representing a realized percentage of maximum possible consumption (0-100%) as our primary response variable and a multi-scale, nested, mixed statistical model (GLIMMIX) to evaluate variation among and within spatial scales and as a function of density and elevation. MGA and year (the residual) explained the greatest proportion of variance in BioEff. Temperature varied widely among MGA and was a strong driver of variation in BioEff. We observed surprisingly little variation in the diet of brown trout, except the overwhelming influence of the switch to piscivory observed only in exotic MGA. We observed only a weak signal of density-dependent effects on BioEff; however, BioEff remained <50% at densities >2.5 fish/m(2). The trajectory of BioEff across the life span of the fish elucidated the substantial variation in performance among MGAs; the maximum body size attained by brown trout was consistently below 400 mm in native habitat but reached; 600 mm outside their native range, where brown trout grew rapidly, feeding in part on naive prey fishes. The integrative, physiological approach, in combination with the intercontinental and comparative nature of our study, allowed us to overcome challenges associated with context-dependent variation in determining invasion success. Overall our results indicate growth plasticity across the life span was important for facilitating invasion, and should be added to lists of factors characterizing successful invaders.

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