Do alpine macroinvertebrates recover differently in lakes and rivers after alien fish eradication?

Introduced fish can have detrimental effects on native biota inhabiting alpine freshwaters with the extent of their impact depending on variables such as habitat features. The present study aims to compare the recovery of macroinvertebrate communities following a fish eradication campaign in a mount...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tiberti Rocco, Brighenti Stefano
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2019-01-01
Series:Knowledge and Management of Aquatic Ecosystems
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.kmae-journal.org/articles/kmae/full_html/2019/01/kmae190064/kmae190064.html
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spelling doaj-1c903270caa54e709fdc6d1755d7aa642020-11-25T00:51:29ZengEDP SciencesKnowledge and Management of Aquatic Ecosystems1961-95022019-01-0104203710.1051/kmae/2019029kmae190064Do alpine macroinvertebrates recover differently in lakes and rivers after alien fish eradication?Tiberti RoccoBrighenti StefanoIntroduced fish can have detrimental effects on native biota inhabiting alpine freshwaters with the extent of their impact depending on variables such as habitat features. The present study aims to compare the recovery of macroinvertebrate communities following a fish eradication campaign in a mountain lake (Lake Dres, 2087 m a.s.l., Western Italian Alps) and its inflowing and outflowing streams. All fish were removed using mechanical methods, not producing side-effects for macroinvertebrates. During eradication, the lake community, which had previously been greatly affected, rapidly recovered to levels typical of never-stocked lakes. Stream communities, however, were apparently not impacted by fish populations and remained relatively stable, proving their greater capacity to withstand fish presence. The abundance of spatial refugia and invertebrate recruitment (via birth or immigration) can explain the observed stability in stream communities. Drifting macroinvertebrates are often called into question to explain the resistance of stream communities as they can partially offset predation via benthic recruitment, but our results show that stream resistance can be high even where drift is low, i.e., in the outflowing stream.https://www.kmae-journal.org/articles/kmae/full_html/2019/01/kmae190064/kmae190064.htmlEcological restorationSalvelinus fontinalisalpine streamsalpine lakesdrift
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tiberti Rocco
Brighenti Stefano
spellingShingle Tiberti Rocco
Brighenti Stefano
Do alpine macroinvertebrates recover differently in lakes and rivers after alien fish eradication?
Knowledge and Management of Aquatic Ecosystems
Ecological restoration
Salvelinus fontinalis
alpine streams
alpine lakes
drift
author_facet Tiberti Rocco
Brighenti Stefano
author_sort Tiberti Rocco
title Do alpine macroinvertebrates recover differently in lakes and rivers after alien fish eradication?
title_short Do alpine macroinvertebrates recover differently in lakes and rivers after alien fish eradication?
title_full Do alpine macroinvertebrates recover differently in lakes and rivers after alien fish eradication?
title_fullStr Do alpine macroinvertebrates recover differently in lakes and rivers after alien fish eradication?
title_full_unstemmed Do alpine macroinvertebrates recover differently in lakes and rivers after alien fish eradication?
title_sort do alpine macroinvertebrates recover differently in lakes and rivers after alien fish eradication?
publisher EDP Sciences
series Knowledge and Management of Aquatic Ecosystems
issn 1961-9502
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Introduced fish can have detrimental effects on native biota inhabiting alpine freshwaters with the extent of their impact depending on variables such as habitat features. The present study aims to compare the recovery of macroinvertebrate communities following a fish eradication campaign in a mountain lake (Lake Dres, 2087 m a.s.l., Western Italian Alps) and its inflowing and outflowing streams. All fish were removed using mechanical methods, not producing side-effects for macroinvertebrates. During eradication, the lake community, which had previously been greatly affected, rapidly recovered to levels typical of never-stocked lakes. Stream communities, however, were apparently not impacted by fish populations and remained relatively stable, proving their greater capacity to withstand fish presence. The abundance of spatial refugia and invertebrate recruitment (via birth or immigration) can explain the observed stability in stream communities. Drifting macroinvertebrates are often called into question to explain the resistance of stream communities as they can partially offset predation via benthic recruitment, but our results show that stream resistance can be high even where drift is low, i.e., in the outflowing stream.
topic Ecological restoration
Salvelinus fontinalis
alpine streams
alpine lakes
drift
url https://www.kmae-journal.org/articles/kmae/full_html/2019/01/kmae190064/kmae190064.html
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AT brighentistefano doalpinemacroinvertebratesrecoverdifferentlyinlakesandriversafteralienfisheradication
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