| Literature DB >> 28747531 |
Yehezkel Buba1, Itai van Rijn2, Shane A Blowes2,3, Oren Sonin4, Dor Edelist5, John P DeLong6, Jonathan Belmaker2,7.
Abstract
The Mediterranean Sea is an invasion hotspot, with non-indigenous species suspected to be a major driver behind community changes. We used size spectra, a reliable index of food web structure, to examine how the influx of Red Sea fishes into the Mediterranean Sea has impacted the indigenous species community. This is the first attempt to use changes in the size spectra to reveal the effect of biological invasions. We used data from trawl catches along Israel's shoreline spanning 20 years to estimate changes in the community size spectra of both indigenous and non-indigenous species. We found that the relative biomass of non-indigenous species increased over the 20 years, especially for small and large species, leading to a convergence with the indigenous species size spectra. Hence, the biomass of indigenous and non-indigenous species has become identical for all size classes, suggesting similar energetic constraints and sensitivities to fishing. However, over this time period the size spectrum of indigenous species has remained remarkably constant. This suggests that the wide-scale invasion of non-indigenous species into the Mediterranean may have had little impact on the community structure of indigenous species.Entities:
Keywords: Lessepsian migration; Mediterranean Sea; biological invasions; size spectra
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28747531 PMCID: PMC5543019 DOI: 10.1098/rsbl.2017.0159
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Lett ISSN: 1744-9561 Impact factor: 3.703