Effects of Environmental Gradients on the Biomass of Alien Cercopagis pengoi in the Neva Estuary

Biological invasions are a global trend due to globalization of the world. An important goal of invasion biology is to identify environmental characteristics that may make a region receptive to invasions. We tested the hypothesis that environmental variables have stronger effect on the biomass of th...

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Main Authors: Mikhail S. Golubkov, Larisa F. Litvinchuk, Sergey M. Golubkov
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-12-01
Series:Frontiers in Marine Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2020.573289/full
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spelling doaj-b1542a482b534724b1f332d3d4fe77e02020-12-15T07:05:04ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Marine Science2296-77452020-12-01710.3389/fmars.2020.573289573289Effects of Environmental Gradients on the Biomass of Alien Cercopagis pengoi in the Neva EstuaryMikhail S. GolubkovLarisa F. LitvinchukSergey M. GolubkovBiological invasions are a global trend due to globalization of the world. An important goal of invasion biology is to identify environmental characteristics that may make a region receptive to invasions. We tested the hypothesis that environmental variables have stronger effect on the biomass of the alien Cercopagis pengoi in the Neva Estuary than biotic interactions with other zooplankton species. Hierarchical cluster, principal component and Pearson correlation analyzes were used to elucidate changes within the zooplankton community along environmental gradients. The data analysis showed that the biomass of C. pengoi was higher in waters with higher salinity, low temperature, high transparency, lower chlorophyll a concentration and lower proportion of chlorophyll in particulate suspended matter. The biomass of C. pengoi showed significant positive correlations with biomasses of its potential preys. However, we did not find direct significant negative correlations between C. pengoi and larger zooplankton predators Leptodora kindtii and Bythotrephes spp. This research generally supports the hypothesis that if environmental variables are appropriate for an exotic species, then that species is likely to invade successfully, regardless of the native species already present.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2020.573289/fullzooplanktonbiotic interactionsGulf of FinlandBaltic Seainvasive speciesCercopagis pengoi
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mikhail S. Golubkov
Larisa F. Litvinchuk
Sergey M. Golubkov
spellingShingle Mikhail S. Golubkov
Larisa F. Litvinchuk
Sergey M. Golubkov
Effects of Environmental Gradients on the Biomass of Alien Cercopagis pengoi in the Neva Estuary
Frontiers in Marine Science
zooplankton
biotic interactions
Gulf of Finland
Baltic Sea
invasive species
Cercopagis pengoi
author_facet Mikhail S. Golubkov
Larisa F. Litvinchuk
Sergey M. Golubkov
author_sort Mikhail S. Golubkov
title Effects of Environmental Gradients on the Biomass of Alien Cercopagis pengoi in the Neva Estuary
title_short Effects of Environmental Gradients on the Biomass of Alien Cercopagis pengoi in the Neva Estuary
title_full Effects of Environmental Gradients on the Biomass of Alien Cercopagis pengoi in the Neva Estuary
title_fullStr Effects of Environmental Gradients on the Biomass of Alien Cercopagis pengoi in the Neva Estuary
title_full_unstemmed Effects of Environmental Gradients on the Biomass of Alien Cercopagis pengoi in the Neva Estuary
title_sort effects of environmental gradients on the biomass of alien cercopagis pengoi in the neva estuary
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Marine Science
issn 2296-7745
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Biological invasions are a global trend due to globalization of the world. An important goal of invasion biology is to identify environmental characteristics that may make a region receptive to invasions. We tested the hypothesis that environmental variables have stronger effect on the biomass of the alien Cercopagis pengoi in the Neva Estuary than biotic interactions with other zooplankton species. Hierarchical cluster, principal component and Pearson correlation analyzes were used to elucidate changes within the zooplankton community along environmental gradients. The data analysis showed that the biomass of C. pengoi was higher in waters with higher salinity, low temperature, high transparency, lower chlorophyll a concentration and lower proportion of chlorophyll in particulate suspended matter. The biomass of C. pengoi showed significant positive correlations with biomasses of its potential preys. However, we did not find direct significant negative correlations between C. pengoi and larger zooplankton predators Leptodora kindtii and Bythotrephes spp. This research generally supports the hypothesis that if environmental variables are appropriate for an exotic species, then that species is likely to invade successfully, regardless of the native species already present.
topic zooplankton
biotic interactions
Gulf of Finland
Baltic Sea
invasive species
Cercopagis pengoi
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2020.573289/full
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