Document of bibliographic reference 325331

BibliographicReference record

Type
Bibliographic resource
Type of document
Journal article
BibLvlCode
AS
Title
Climate warming moderates the impacts of introduced sportfish on multiple dimensions of prey biodiversity
Abstract
Human‐assisted introductions of exotic species are a leading cause of anthropogenic change in biodiversity; however, context dependencies and interactions with co‐occurring stressors impede our ability to predict their ecological impacts. The legacy of historical sportfish stocking in mountainous regions of western North America creates a unique, natural quasi‐experiment to investigate factors moderating invasion impacts on native communities across broad geographic and environmental gradients. Here, we synthesize fish stocking records and zooplankton relative abundance for 685 mountain lakes and ponds in the Cascade and Canadian Rocky Mountain Ranges, to reveal the effects of predatory sportfish introduction on multiple taxonomic, functional, and phylogenetic dimensions of prey biodiversity. We demonstrate an innovative analytical approach, combining exploratory random forest machine learning with confirmatory multigroup analysis using multivariate partial least‐squares structural equation models, to generate and test hypotheses concerning environmental moderation of stocking impacts. We discovered distinct effects of stocking across different dimensions of diversity, including negligible (nonsignificant) impacts on local taxonomic richness (i.e. alpha diversity) and trophic structure, in contrast to significant declines in compositional uniqueness (i.e. beta diversity) and body size. Further, we found that stocking impacts were moderated by cross‐scale interactions with climate and climate‐related land‐cover variables (e.g. factors linked to treeline position and glaciers). Interactions with physical morphometric and lithological factors were generally of lesser importance, though catchment slope and habitat size constraints were relevant in certain dimensions. Finally, applying space‐for‐time substitution, a strong antagonistic (i.e. dampening) interaction between sportfish predation and warmer temperatures suggests redundancy of their size‐selective effects, meaning that warming will lessen the consequences of introductions in the future and stocked lakes may be less impacted by subsequent warming. While both stressors drive biotic homogenization, our results have important implications for fisheries managers weighing the costs/benefits of stocking—or removing established non‐native populations—under a rapidly changing climate.
WebOfScience code
https://www.webofscience.com/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:000545783900001
Bibliographic citation
Loewen, C.J.G.; Strecker, A.L.; Gilbert, B.; Jackson, D.A. (2020). Climate warming moderates the impacts of introduced sportfish on multiple dimensions of prey biodiversity. Glob. Chang. Biol. 26(9): 4937-4951. https://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gcb.15225
Is peer reviewed
true

Authors

author
Name
Charlie Loewen
author
Name
Angela Strecker
author
Name
Benjamin Gilbert
author
Name
Donald Jackson

Links

referenced creativework
type
DOI
accessURL
https://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gcb.15225

Document metadata

date created
2020-06-29
date modified
2020-08-12