4.6 Article

Anadromous sea lampreys (Petromyzon marinus) are ecosystem engineers in a spawning tributary

Journal

FRESHWATER BIOLOGY
Volume 59, Issue 6, Pages 1294-1307

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/fwb.12349

Keywords

anadromous fishes; ecosystem engineers; benthic invertebrates; sea lampreys; freshwater spawning habitat

Funding

  1. Maine Sea Grant
  2. Atlantic Salmon Federation
  3. Penobscot Valley Audubon Chapter
  4. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
  5. University of Maine
  6. U.S. Geological Survey, Maine Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit
  7. Hatch from the USDA National Institute of Food Agriculture [ME08367-08H]

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Sea lampreys (Petromyzon marinus) disturb the substratum during nest construction and alter the physical habitat, potentially affecting other stream organisms. We quantified differences in depth, velocity, fine-sediment coverage, embeddedness, intragravel permeability and benthic invertebrate assemblages (density and diversity) among nest mounds, nest pits and undisturbed reference locations over a 4-month period after June spawning. In 2010 and 2011, immediate and persistent effects of nest construction were assessed in summer (July) and in autumn (late September to early October), respectively. Randomly selected nests were sampled annually (25 each in summer and autumn). Nest construction increased stream-bed complexity by creating and juxtaposing shallow, swift, rocky habitat patches with deep, slow, sandy habitat patches. Mounds had a 50-143% less cover of fine sediment, and a 30-62% reduction in embeddedness, compared to pits and reference locations. These physical changes persisted into the autumn (almost 4months). Five insect families contributed 74% of the benthic invertebrate abundance: Chironomidae (27%), Hydropsychidae (26%), Heptageniidae (8%), Philopotamidae (7%) and Ephemerellidae (6%). Densities of Hydropsychidae, Philopotamidae and Heptageniidae were up to 10 times greater in mounds than in pits and adjacent reference habitat. In summer, mounds had twice the density of Chironomidae than did pits, and 1.5 times more than reference habitats, but densities were similar among the habitats in autumn. These results suggest that spawning sea lampreys are ecosystem engineers. The physical disturbance caused by nest-building activity was significant and persistent, increasing habitat heterogeneity and favouring pollution-sensitive benthic invertebrates and, possibly, drift-feeding fish.

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