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First-season growth and food of YOY pike (Esox lucius) are habitat specific within a lake

Nilsson, P. A. LU orcid ; Ranåker, L. LU ; Hulthén, K. LU ; Nilsson-Örtman, V. LU ; Brönmark, C. LU and Brodersen, J. LU (2023) In Fisheries Research 259.
Abstract

Piscivorous fish are important predators in aquatic systems and as such they can have far-reaching effects on ecosystem composition and function. These effects depend on piscivore predation rates and behaviour, and recruitment of young-of-the-year fish into piscivory can hereby govern ecosystem properties. Growth and recruitment can differ between water bodies due to e.g. general productivity, but information on variation in juvenile growth and body condition between habitats within water bodies is scant. We here evaluate growth, body condition, food occurrence and stomach contents of an important piscivore, pike (Esox lucius), over the first growth season in two contrasting and spatially separated homogenous habitat types (emergent and... (More)

Piscivorous fish are important predators in aquatic systems and as such they can have far-reaching effects on ecosystem composition and function. These effects depend on piscivore predation rates and behaviour, and recruitment of young-of-the-year fish into piscivory can hereby govern ecosystem properties. Growth and recruitment can differ between water bodies due to e.g. general productivity, but information on variation in juvenile growth and body condition between habitats within water bodies is scant. We here evaluate growth, body condition, food occurrence and stomach contents of an important piscivore, pike (Esox lucius), over the first growth season in two contrasting and spatially separated homogenous habitat types (emergent and submerged vegetation separated by 50 m of open sand) within the same lake. Individual size and body condition in pike were higher in the submerged vegetation early in the season, whereas by the end of their first summer pike were larger and in higher body condition in the emergent vegetation, in spite of occurrence of zooplankton, macroinvertebrates and fish prey being overall higher in the submerged vegetation. Pike showed habitat-specific patterns of macroinvertebrate consumption (higher in the submerged vegetation) and date-specific patterns of zooplankton (higher early in the season), macroinvertebrate (lower late in the season) and fish (higher later in the season) consumption that were not a result of occurrence of food types, as occurrence and consumption patterns did not match. We conclude that pike that hatched in the emergent vegetation habitat were larger towards the end of the season and, hence, these pike should have a higher survival probability and possibly contribute more to pike population density and predation at older ages, but also that submerged vegetation provides an alternative and added recruitment environment for pike in shallow lake ecosystems.

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author
; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Habitat, Piscivore recruitment, Vegetation, Within-lake
in
Fisheries Research
volume
259
article number
106563
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • scopus:85142897865
ISSN
0165-7836
DOI
10.1016/j.fishres.2022.106563
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
684440b7-e28f-476f-a800-9ed54d3b78f1
date added to LUP
2023-01-31 16:03:08
date last changed
2024-05-13 23:04:14
@article{684440b7-e28f-476f-a800-9ed54d3b78f1,
  abstract     = {{<p>Piscivorous fish are important predators in aquatic systems and as such they can have far-reaching effects on ecosystem composition and function. These effects depend on piscivore predation rates and behaviour, and recruitment of young-of-the-year fish into piscivory can hereby govern ecosystem properties. Growth and recruitment can differ between water bodies due to e.g. general productivity, but information on variation in juvenile growth and body condition between habitats within water bodies is scant. We here evaluate growth, body condition, food occurrence and stomach contents of an important piscivore, pike (Esox lucius), over the first growth season in two contrasting and spatially separated homogenous habitat types (emergent and submerged vegetation separated by 50 m of open sand) within the same lake. Individual size and body condition in pike were higher in the submerged vegetation early in the season, whereas by the end of their first summer pike were larger and in higher body condition in the emergent vegetation, in spite of occurrence of zooplankton, macroinvertebrates and fish prey being overall higher in the submerged vegetation. Pike showed habitat-specific patterns of macroinvertebrate consumption (higher in the submerged vegetation) and date-specific patterns of zooplankton (higher early in the season), macroinvertebrate (lower late in the season) and fish (higher later in the season) consumption that were not a result of occurrence of food types, as occurrence and consumption patterns did not match. We conclude that pike that hatched in the emergent vegetation habitat were larger towards the end of the season and, hence, these pike should have a higher survival probability and possibly contribute more to pike population density and predation at older ages, but also that submerged vegetation provides an alternative and added recruitment environment for pike in shallow lake ecosystems.</p>}},
  author       = {{Nilsson, P. A. and Ranåker, L. and Hulthén, K. and Nilsson-Örtman, V. and Brönmark, C. and Brodersen, J.}},
  issn         = {{0165-7836}},
  keywords     = {{Habitat; Piscivore recruitment; Vegetation; Within-lake}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{Fisheries Research}},
  title        = {{First-season growth and food of YOY pike (Esox lucius) are habitat specific within a lake}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.fishres.2022.106563}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.fishres.2022.106563}},
  volume       = {{259}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}