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Benthic biological invasions in two temperate estuaries and their effects on trophic relations of native fish and community stability

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

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Title Benthic biological invasions in two temperate estuaries and their effects on trophic relations of native fish and community stability
Names Castillo, Gonzalo C. (creator)
Li, Hiram W. (advisor)
Date Issued 2000-07-14 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 2001
Abstract The extent of biological invasions, their role on the feeding of
native fishes and their impact on community stability were
investigated in Alsea Bay and Yaquina Bay, two estuaries on the
central Oregon coast, USA. Most nonindigenous species (NIS)
introduced in these intermediately invaded estuaries are
considered byproducts of culturing introduced Atlantic and
Pacific oysters. Secondary potential vectors of NIS in Yaquina
Bay are external fouling of ship hulls and ballast water. Native
benthic invertebrates and native fishes dominate in density,
catch per unit effort (CPUE) and richness in both estuaries.
Three of the 11 benthic NIS of invertebrates in Yaquina Bay and
one of the eight NIS in Alsea Bay are among the 10 most dominant
benthic invertebrate species. The NIS of invertebrates are
concentrated in habitats with above average water temperature,
salinity, and macrophyte density at high-tide. The CPUE of
fishes and decapod crustaceans are associated with above average
water temperature, salinity and macrophyte density but are not
consistently correlated with invertebrate density in sediments.
Biological invasions have caused significant prey shifts in
intertidal food webs of Yaquina Bay. Diets of two species of
native juvenile flatfishes (Pleuronectes vetulus and Platichthys
stellatus) included mainly polychaetes, crustaceans and bivalves
and each of these taxa are represented in the diet by native
species and NIS in each estuary. Both flatfish species are
generalist predators and had no consistently higher selection for either native species or MIS. Prey selection experiments
indicated that two native and two introduced amphipod prey
(Corophium spp.) are acceptable prey for juvenile English sole.
Thus, predator-prey coevolution plays no significant role on
prey selection. Interspecific prey selection may depend on prey
exposure, water visibility, substratum type, and species
diversity of available prey. Modeling of functional-group
interactions for the intertidal benthic community of Yaquina Bay
suggested reduced community response to invasions or removal of
fish predators as indicated by the community tendency to zero
overall-feedback. However, the increased risk of stability
decline of invaded community models implies that further human-mediated
biological invasions should be avoided.
Genre Thesis/Dissertation
Topic Multitrophic interactions (Ecology) -- Oregon
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/20236

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