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        Trophic consequences of an invasive, small-bodied nonnative fish, sunbleak Leucaspius delineatus, for native pond fishes

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        Author
        Bašić, Tea
        Copp, Gordon
        Edmonds-Brown, Veronica
        Keskin, Emre
        Davison, Phillip
        Britton, Robert
        Attention
        2299/22247
        Abstract
        Assessments of the trophic consequences of invasive fishes are important for quantifying their ecological impacts on native species more generally. A small-bodied cyprinid fish native to continental Europe and introduced in the 1970s to the U.K, the sunbleak Leuciscus delineatus, has been shown previously to establish closer social associations with native species of similar size than do native species amongst themselves. To assess the potential detrimental trophic consequences of native species associations with L. delineatus, a field-based experiment was undertaken in summer 2015 in six outdoor, artificial ponds containing three native cyprinid species (rudd Scardinius erthrophthalamus, gudgeon Gobio gobio, tench Tinca tinca). Three ponds were controls (no L. delineatus) and three were treatments (L. delineatus present). The results of stable isotope analysis (SIA) of fish tissue samples provided strong evidence that theisotopic niches of bothnative benthic fishes were reduced in the presence of L. delineatus, although there were no significant effects on the trophic position, body size or condition of two of the three native fish species. Introduced L. delineatus maintained a core isotopic niche that was distinct from the two native benthic fishes, with no overlap detected between native and non-native fishes when including 40% and 95% of the data. These results indicate that the response of the native fishes to the introduction of L. delineatus was niche constriction via trophic specialisation,withthis response sufficienttomaintain their growth rates and condition. This result is similar to studies on a range of small-bodied invasive fishes, suggesting the trophic impacts of these invaders are relatively consistent across species and systems. Keywords Trophic niche Stable isotope analysis Non-native species Niche constriction Outdoor experimental ponds
        Publication date
        2019-01
        Published in
        Biological Invasions
        Published version
        https://doi.org/10.1007/s10530-018-1824-y
        License
        http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
        Other links
        http://hdl.handle.net/2299/22247
        Relations
        School of Life and Medical Sciences
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