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Trophic overlap between fish and riparian spiders: potential impacts of an invasive fish on terrestrial consumers

Studies on resource sharing and partitioning generally consider species that occur in the same habitat. However, subsidies between linked habitats, such as streams and riparian zones, create potential for competition between populations which never directly interact. Evidence suggests that the abund...

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Autores principales: Jackson, Michelle C., Woodford, Darragh J., Bellingan, Terence A., Weyl, Olaf L. F., Potgieter, Michael J., Rivers‐Moore, Nick A., Ellender, Bruce R., Fourie, Hermina E., Chimimba, Christian T.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4801975/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27087934
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.1893
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author Jackson, Michelle C.
Woodford, Darragh J.
Bellingan, Terence A.
Weyl, Olaf L. F.
Potgieter, Michael J.
Rivers‐Moore, Nick A.
Ellender, Bruce R.
Fourie, Hermina E.
Chimimba, Christian T.
author_facet Jackson, Michelle C.
Woodford, Darragh J.
Bellingan, Terence A.
Weyl, Olaf L. F.
Potgieter, Michael J.
Rivers‐Moore, Nick A.
Ellender, Bruce R.
Fourie, Hermina E.
Chimimba, Christian T.
author_sort Jackson, Michelle C.
collection PubMed
description Studies on resource sharing and partitioning generally consider species that occur in the same habitat. However, subsidies between linked habitats, such as streams and riparian zones, create potential for competition between populations which never directly interact. Evidence suggests that the abundance of riparian consumers declines after fish invasion and a subsequent increase in resource sharing of emerging insects. However, diet overlap has not been investigated. Here, we examine the trophic niche of native fish, invasive fish, and native spiders in South Africa using stable isotope analysis. We compared spider abundance and diet at upstream fishless and downstream fish sites and quantified niche overlap with invasive and native fish. Spider abundance was consistently higher at upstream fishless sites compared with paired downstream fish sites, suggesting that the fish reduced aquatic resource availability to riparian consumers. Spiders incorporated more aquatic than terrestrial insects in their diet, with aquatic insects accounting for 45–90% of spider mass. In three of four invaded trout rivers, we found that the average proportion of aquatic resources in web‐building spider diet was higher at fishless sites compared to fish sites. The probability of web‐building and ground spiders overlapping into the trophic niche of invasive brown and rainbow trout was as high as 26 and 51%, respectively. In contrast, the probability of spiders overlapping into the trophic niche of native fish was always less than 5%. Our results suggest that spiders share resources with invasive fish. In contrast, spiders had a low probability of trophic overlap with native fish indicating that the traits of invaders may be important in determining their influence on ecosystem subsidies. We have added to the growing body of evidence that invaders can have cross‐ecosystem impacts and demonstrated that this can be due to niche overlap.
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spelling pubmed-48019752016-04-15 Trophic overlap between fish and riparian spiders: potential impacts of an invasive fish on terrestrial consumers Jackson, Michelle C. Woodford, Darragh J. Bellingan, Terence A. Weyl, Olaf L. F. Potgieter, Michael J. Rivers‐Moore, Nick A. Ellender, Bruce R. Fourie, Hermina E. Chimimba, Christian T. Ecol Evol Original Research Studies on resource sharing and partitioning generally consider species that occur in the same habitat. However, subsidies between linked habitats, such as streams and riparian zones, create potential for competition between populations which never directly interact. Evidence suggests that the abundance of riparian consumers declines after fish invasion and a subsequent increase in resource sharing of emerging insects. However, diet overlap has not been investigated. Here, we examine the trophic niche of native fish, invasive fish, and native spiders in South Africa using stable isotope analysis. We compared spider abundance and diet at upstream fishless and downstream fish sites and quantified niche overlap with invasive and native fish. Spider abundance was consistently higher at upstream fishless sites compared with paired downstream fish sites, suggesting that the fish reduced aquatic resource availability to riparian consumers. Spiders incorporated more aquatic than terrestrial insects in their diet, with aquatic insects accounting for 45–90% of spider mass. In three of four invaded trout rivers, we found that the average proportion of aquatic resources in web‐building spider diet was higher at fishless sites compared to fish sites. The probability of web‐building and ground spiders overlapping into the trophic niche of invasive brown and rainbow trout was as high as 26 and 51%, respectively. In contrast, the probability of spiders overlapping into the trophic niche of native fish was always less than 5%. Our results suggest that spiders share resources with invasive fish. In contrast, spiders had a low probability of trophic overlap with native fish indicating that the traits of invaders may be important in determining their influence on ecosystem subsidies. We have added to the growing body of evidence that invaders can have cross‐ecosystem impacts and demonstrated that this can be due to niche overlap. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2016-02-17 /pmc/articles/PMC4801975/ /pubmed/27087934 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.1893 Text en © 2016 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Research
Jackson, Michelle C.
Woodford, Darragh J.
Bellingan, Terence A.
Weyl, Olaf L. F.
Potgieter, Michael J.
Rivers‐Moore, Nick A.
Ellender, Bruce R.
Fourie, Hermina E.
Chimimba, Christian T.
Trophic overlap between fish and riparian spiders: potential impacts of an invasive fish on terrestrial consumers
title Trophic overlap between fish and riparian spiders: potential impacts of an invasive fish on terrestrial consumers
title_full Trophic overlap between fish and riparian spiders: potential impacts of an invasive fish on terrestrial consumers
title_fullStr Trophic overlap between fish and riparian spiders: potential impacts of an invasive fish on terrestrial consumers
title_full_unstemmed Trophic overlap between fish and riparian spiders: potential impacts of an invasive fish on terrestrial consumers
title_short Trophic overlap between fish and riparian spiders: potential impacts of an invasive fish on terrestrial consumers
title_sort trophic overlap between fish and riparian spiders: potential impacts of an invasive fish on terrestrial consumers
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4801975/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27087934
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.1893
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