| Literature DB >> 32571940 |
Ádám Lovas-Kiss1, Orsolya Vincze2,3, Viktor Löki1, Felícia Pallér-Kapusi1,4, Béla Halasi-Kovács5, Gyula Kovács5, Andy J Green6, Balázs András Lukács1.
Abstract
Fish have somehow colonized isolated water bodies all over the world without human assistance. It has long been speculated that these colonization events are assisted by waterbirds, transporting fish eggs attached to their feet and feathers, yet empirical support for this is lacking. Recently, it was suggested that endozoochory (i.e., internal transport within the gut) might play a more important role, but only highly resistant diapause eggs of killifish have been found to survive passage through waterbird guts. Here, we performed a controlled feeding experiment, where developing eggs of two cosmopolitan, invasive cyprinids (common carp, Prussian carp) were fed to captive mallards. Live embryos of both species were retrieved from fresh feces and survived beyond hatching. Our study identifies an overlooked dispersal mechanism in fish, providing evidence for bird-mediated dispersal ability of soft-membraned eggs undergoing active development. Only 0.2% of ingested eggs survived gut passage, yet, given the abundance, diet, and movements of ducks in nature, our results have major implications for biodiversity conservation and invasion dynamics in freshwater ecosystems.Entities:
Keywords: endozoochory; fish distribution; freshwater; invasion; long-distance dispersal
Year: 2020 PMID: 32571940 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2004805117
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205