Individual diet specialization drives population trophic niche responses to environmental change in a predator fish population

Food Webs ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 27 ◽  
pp. e00193
Author(s):  
Simon D. Stewart ◽  
David Kelly ◽  
Laura Biessy ◽  
Olivier Laroche ◽  
Susanna A. Wood
1999 ◽  
Vol 36 (12) ◽  
pp. 2059-2072 ◽  
Author(s):  
Douglas G Barton ◽  
Mark VH Wilson

Varved, lacustrine rocks of the Middle Eocene Horsefly deposits in British Columbia are ideal for microstratigraphic studies. Temporal resolution in such varved deposits can theoretically be as small as a year. In the Horsefly beds, specimens can be assigned precisely to their position in the stratigraphic section by comparing the laminations enclosing the fossils with those of a reference section. Each fossil can thus be assigned to a relative year of death. Some 700 specimens of the catostomid fish Amyzon aggregatum from the 10 000-year "H3" varved interval are examined for meristic variation. Very few of the meristic variables are significantly correlated with each other. Meristic series that are the last to develop ontogenetically are also the most phenotypically variable. In the studied interval, meristic variation has a strong temporal component, particularly in the case of fin rays and in the ratio between precaudal and caudal vertebral counts. Much, but not all, of this temporal variation occurs in conjunction with environmental changes in the lake as estimated by taphonomy and is consistent with some combination of ecophenotypic and (or) evolutionary responses of the fish population to the environmental change.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Catalina Chaparro-Pedraza ◽  
André M. de Roos

AbstractMigration, the recurring movement of individuals between a breeding and a non-breeding habitat, is a widespread phenomenon in the animal kingdom. Since the life cycle of migratory species involves two habitats, they are particularly vulnerable to environmental change, which may affect either of these habitats as well as the travel between them. In this study, we investigate the consequences of environmental change affecting older life history stages for the population dynamics and the individual life history of a migratory population. In particular, we use a theoretical approach to study how increased energetic cost of the breeding travel and reduced survival and food availability in the non-breeding habitat affect an anadromous fish population. These unfavorable conditions have impacts at individual and population level. First, when conditions deteriorate individuals in the breeding habitat have a higher growth rate as a consequence of reductions in spawning that reduce competition. Second, population abundance decreases, and its dynamics change from stable to oscillations with a period of four years. The oscillations are caused by the density-dependent feedback between individuals within a cohort through the food abundance in the breeding habitat, which results in alternation of a strong and a weak cohort. Our results explain how environmental change, by affecting older life history stages, has multiple consequences for other life stages and for the entire population. We discuss these results in the context of empirical data and highlight the need for mechanistic understanding of the interactions between life history and population dynamics in response to environmental change.


2019 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Davide Thambithurai ◽  
Amelie Crespel ◽  
Tommy Norin ◽  
Anita Rácz ◽  
Jan Lindström ◽  
...  

Lay summary Selective harvest of wild organisms by humans can influence the evolution of plants and animals, and fishing is recognized as a particularly strong driver of this process. Importantly, these effects occur alongside environmental change. Here we show that aquatic hypoxia can alter which individuals within a fish population are vulnerable to capture by trawling, potentially altering the selection and evolutionary effects stemming from commercial fisheries.


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