Frequent Consumption and Rapid Digestion of Prey by the Lake Erie Watersnake with Implications for an Invasive Prey Species

COPEIA(2009)

引用 21|浏览10
暂无评分
摘要
Studies of Interactions between invasive and native species often focus on Impacts on natives. We report potential Impacts of a native predator, the Lake Erie Watersnake (Nerodio sipdeon insularum) on an Invasive fish, the Round Goby (Apollonia melanostomus). Round Gobies have Increased exponentially in the Great Lakes and now constitute >90% of prey consumed by Lake Erie Watersnakes. We Investigated the effects this shift may have on round goby populations by estimating total prey consumption by Lake Erie Watersnakes. Digestive rate trials and maximum voluntary prey consumption trials Indicate that gastric digestion is rapid (digestion was 90% complete after, just 16.4 hours at 30 degrees C and 20.1 hours at 25 degrees C) and voluntary prey consumption is high (from 30.0% of adult female body mass to 117% of neonate body mass In five days). Based on palpation of wild-caught snakes, prey were detected more frequently In adult females than adult males, but no such difference was observed in subadults. The proportion of snakes containing prey varied over time with season-long averages of 11.6% for adult females, 6.9% for adult males, and 22.4% for subadults. Systematic surveys by boat indicate that nearly 90% of foraging occurs <150 m from shore. Projected annual consumption, based on gastric digestion rate, maximum voluntary prey consumption, feeding frequency of free-ranging snakes, and published energetic data and a population size of 12,000 adult watersnakes, ranges from 200,0003,300,000 Round Gobles (4,455-56,178 kg) per year. Although Impressive, this rate of prey consumption is unlikely to have more than local effects on Round Goby populations.
更多
查看译文
关键词
consumption,digestion,native species,prey,foraging
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要