Authors
Marisol P Valverde, Diana MT Sharpe, Mark E Torchin, David G Buck, Lauren J Chapman
Publication date
2020/2
Journal
Biological Invasions
Volume
22
Pages
643-661
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Description
Some of the most dramatic and well-studied impacts of introduced predators involve their ecological effects on native prey communities. However, how native predators respond to introduced predators has received less attention. Here, we examined the potential impacts of an introduced predatory fish (Cichla monoculus, the peacock bass) on the diet and trophic ecology of a native predator (Hoplias microlepis) in Lake Gatun, Panama. We used stomach content analysis and stable isotope analysis to quantify the dietary niche of both species in sympatry, and of the native predator in the presence vs. absence of the peacock bass. We found that in the presence of the peacock bass, H. microlepis had a more diverse diet and a wider (five-fold) isotopic niche, relative to where it occurred alone. Specifically, H. microlepis, which were predominantly piscivorous in the absence of peacock bass, broadened their diet …
Total citations
2020202120222023202412223
Scholar articles