Isotopic Overlap of Invasive and Native Consumers in the Food Web of Lake Trasimeno (Central Italy).

Autor: Cicala, Davide, Guerra, Maria Teresa, Bardelli, Roberta, Di Muri, Cristina, Ludovisi, Alessandro, Vizzini, Salvatrice, Mancinelli, Giorgio
Předmět:
Zdroj: Biology (2079-7737); Sep2023, Vol. 12 Issue 9, p1270, 22p
Abstrakt: Simple Summary: An in-depth study of the feeding habits characterizing bioinvaders may provide key information on the magnitude of their impacts on recipient communities. Specifically, if invaders' trophic niche is superimposed on that of native species, interspecific competition may increase, resulting in negative consequences for the competing species; alternatively, trophic niche divergence may occur, facilitating the invaders' integration into the community. In the present study, the analysis of carbon and nitrogen stable isotopes was used to investigate the trophic overlap of native and non-indigenous consumers. We found a generally low degree of isotopic overlap in both the invertebrate and fish assemblage, a condition that may facilitate coexistence and, in turn, limit the strength of invaders' impact. The only exception was the Louisiana crayfish Procambarus clarkii, which was demonstrated to interact with a wide spectrum of native invertebrate species, confirming the necessity of guaranteeing appropriate measures of control and mitigation of its ecological impacts. An advanced characterization of the trophic niche of non-indigenous species (NIS) may provide useful information on their ecological impact on invaded communities. Here, we used carbon and nitrogen stable isotopes to estimate pairwise niche overlaps between non-indigenous and native consumers in the winter food web of Lake Trasimeno (central Italy). Overall, a relatively low pairwise overlap of isotopic niches was observed between NIS and native species. The only exception was the Louisiana crayfish Procambarus clarkii, which showed a relatively high and diffuse overlap with other native invertebrates. Our findings highlighted a high niche divergence between non-indigenous and native species in Lake Trasimeno, suggesting a potentially low degree of interspecific competition that may facilitate coexistence and, in turn, limit the strength of impacts. The divergent results obtained for the Louisiana crayfish indicate that additional control measures for this invasive species are needed to mitigate its impact on the Lake Trasimeno system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index