Exploring temporal patterns in fish feeding ecology: Are ontogenetic dietary shifts stable over time?
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2022
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Springer
Resumen
Disentangling the causes and consequences of ontogenetic niche shifts has been a pivotal
challenge in ecology, aiming to enhance the understanding of biological processes that function at the
individual, population, and community levels. Studies on ontogenetic dietary shifts have traditionally
focused on short time scales, mostly including sampling covering just one or a few consecutive years,
thus neglecting possible aspects of temporal variation and ecosystem stability that can only be revealed
on long-term scales. We address ontogenetic dietary
shifts of two fsh predators in an intraguild system
(Arctic charr and brown trout) using a long-term dataset spanning 20 consecutive years. Our study
revealed distinct ontogenetic niche shifts of the two
intraguild predators and demonstrated that these patterns were stable over time, suggesting large stability
in prey acquisition and resource partitioning despite
changes in their abundances and relative species composition. Some interannual variation was observed,
but this was primarily due to sampling bias from low
observation numbers for some ontogenetic stages,
refecting a common methodical challenge for ontogenetic niche shift studies. The persistent patterns in the
trophic ontogeny of intraguild predators likely facilitate population and community stability by reducing
inter- and/or intraspecifc competition, thereby having
important consequences for ecosystem functioning
and resilience. Our study provides a strong rationale
for performing ontogenetic niche shift studies over
several consecutive years, enabling important insights
into temporal variation, enhancement of observation
numbers by merging data from multiple years, and
the facilitation of a less intrusive sampling scheme for
more vulnerable populations.
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Acknowledgements
We thank Laina Dalsbø, Jan Evjen, Cesilie Bye, Karin Strand Johannessen, Runar Kjær, and numerous other staff and students in the Freshwater Ecology Group at UiT the Arctic University of Norway for assistance in the long-term field sampling and laboratory work. We are also grateful for financial support from UiT The Arctic University of Norway and the Norwegian research council (project no. 213610).
Funding
Open Access funding provided thanks to the CRUE-CSIC agreement with Springer Nature.
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Citación
Sánchez-Hernández, J., Prati, S., Henriksen, E.H. et al. Exploring temporal patterns in fish feeding ecology: Are ontogenetic dietary shifts stable over time?. Rev Fish Biol Fisheries 32, 1141–1155 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11160-022-09724-9
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