4.3 Article

The giants' feast: predation of the large introduced European catfish on spawning migrating allis shads

期刊

AQUATIC ECOLOGY
卷 55, 期 1, 页码 75-83

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10452-020-09811-8

关键词

Anadromous fish; Diet; Endangered species; Large non-native apex predator; Mating

资金

  1. Agence de l'Eau Adour-Garonne (Projet MIGRASIL)

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European catfish predation on anadromous prey such as allis shad has been found to be a significant factor in the mortality of the shad population. Through auditory and video surveys, it was discovered that shad made up a large proportion of the catfish's diet, highlighting the potential impact of the catfish's expanding range on the conservation of anadromous species in Europe.
European catfish Silurus glanis is a large non-native opportunistic predator able to develop hunting strategy in response to newly available prey where it has been introduced. Migrating spawning anadromous prey such as allis shad Alosa alosa could represent this available and energy-rich food resource. Here, we report an impressive catfish hunting behavior on shad spawning act in one of the main spawning grounds in Europe (Garonne River, Southwest France). Shad spawning act consists of at least one male and one female swimming side by side, trashing the water surface with their tail which, therefore, produces a splashing noise audible from the river bank. The catfish hunting behavior on shad spawning act was studied, at night, during spring months, using both auditory and video survey. Simultaneously, catfish individuals were fishing to analyze their stomach content. Catfish disturbed 12% of the 1024 nocturnal spawning acts we heard, and this proportion increased to 37% among the 129 spawning acts when estimated with low-light camera recording. Stomach content analyses on 251 large catfish individuals (body length > 128 cm) caught in the same river stretch revealed shad represented 88.5% of identified prey items in catfish diet. This work demonstrates that European catfish predation must be considered as a significant factor of mortality of allis shad. In a context of the extension of the European catfish range area in western and southern European freshwaters, this new trophic impact, with other ones previously described for salmon or lamprey, has to be considered in European conservation plans of anadromous species.

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