| Literature DB >> 34339467 |
Jan Baer1, Sarah Maria Gugele1,2, Joachim Bretzel1, J Tyrell DeWeber1, Alexander Brinker1,2.
Abstract
The three-spined stickleback Gasterosteus aculeatus invaded Lake Contance in the 1940s and expanded in large numbers from an exclusively shoreline habitat into the pelagic zone in 2012. Stickleback abundance is very high in the pelagic zone in winter near the spawning time of pelagic whitefish Coregonus wartmanni, and it is hypothesized that this is triggered by the opportunity to consume whitefish eggs. Field sampling has qualitatively confirmed predation of whitefish eggs by stickleback, but quantification has proven difficult due to stormy conditions that limit sampling. One fundamental unknown is if freshwater stickleback, known as visual feeders, can successfully find and eat whitefish eggs during twilight and night when whitefish spawn. It is also unknown how long eggs can be identified in stomachs following ingestion, which could limit efforts to quantify egg predation through stomach content analysis. To answer these questions, 144 individuals were given the opportunity to feed on whitefish roe under daylight, twilight, and darkness in controlled conditions. The results showed that stickleback can ingest as many as 100 whitefish eggs under any light conditions, and some individuals even consumed maximum numbers in complete darkness. Furthermore, eggs could be unambiguously identified in the stomach 24 hours after consumption. Whitefish eggs have 28% more energy content than the main diet of sticklebacks (zooplankton) based on bomb-calorimetric measurements, underlining the potential benefits of consuming eggs. Based on experimental results and estimates of stickleback abundance and total egg production, stickleback could potentially consume substantial proportions of the total eggs produced even if relatively few sticklebacks consume eggs. Given the evidence that stickleback can feed on eggs during nighttime spawning and may thereby hamper recruitment, future studies aimed at quantifying actual egg predation and resulting effects on the whitefish population are urgently needed.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34339467 PMCID: PMC8328295 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0255497
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Box plot of the number of consumed eggs by light intensity treatment.
Box limits indicate the 25th and 75th percentiles, centrelines show the medians, centre boxes the mean, whiskers extend 1.5 times the interquartile range from the 25th and 75th percentiles, and outliers are represented by crosses. Circles with whiskers (dotted lines) show the grand marginal means and their standard errors. Groups sharing the same alphabetic character are not significantly different (Tukey-Kramer HSD, P < 0.05).
Fig 2Whitefish eggs extracted from stickleback stomachs 30 minutes (A), 3 hours (B), 6 hours (C) and 24 hours (D) after eggs were available for consumption.
The abundance, mean length, mean fecundity, and number of produced eggs in age classes 3–6 used to estimate total whitefish egg production in 2014.
| Age | Abundance | Mean Length | Mean Fecundity | Eggs (n) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 230 000 | 30.2 | 6 100 | 1 403 000 000 | |
| 76 000 | 32.5 | 9 700 | 737 200 000 | |
| 6 000 | 34.2 | 12 300 | 73 800 000 | |
| 570 | 35.4 | 14 200 | 8 100 000 | |
| In total | 2 223 000 000 |