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Direct and indirect effects of predation on a fish community: A whole lake experiment

journal contribution
posted on 2022-08-03, 00:00 authored by J.F. Kitchell, X He
We designed an experiment to test the relative importances of direct and indirect effects of piscivorous predation on an assemblage of small fishes in a piscivore-free lake. The direct effect is defined as consumption of prey fishes. Indirect effects include habitat changes associated with predator avoidance behavior, increases of emigration rates, and changes of composition and size structure of the prey community. After a year of premanipulation study, adult northern pike Esox/ucius (a predator species) were introduced into the lake. Decrease of prey fish biomass due to increased emigration was at least as great as that due to direct consumption by the predators. Significant indirect effects included decreased abundance of dominant species, increases of some rare species, and decreases of mean size for species most vulnerable to predation. Indirect effects occurred rapidly and were most apparent during weeks immediately after northern pike were introduced.

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Date Modified

2022-08-03

Language

  • English

Publisher

Transactions of the American Fisheries Society

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    University of Notre Dame Environmental Research Center (UNDERC)

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