Historical niche partitioning and long‐term trophic shifts in Laurentian Great Lakes deepwater coregonines

Abstract Over the last 100 yr, anthropogenic stressors have decimated the assemblage of deepwater coregonines that once underpinned the food webs of the Laurentian Great Lakes. As a part of ongoing restoration efforts, fisheries managers are interested in reintroducing deepwater coregonines from rem...

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Main Authors: Chelsey Blanke, Yoshito Chikaraishi, M. Jake Vander Zanden
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2018-01-01
Series:Ecosphere
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.2080
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spelling doaj-649c725b6460470e8a942fb33041ed0a2020-11-24T21:39:38ZengWileyEcosphere2150-89252018-01-0191n/an/a10.1002/ecs2.2080Historical niche partitioning and long‐term trophic shifts in Laurentian Great Lakes deepwater coregoninesChelsey Blanke0Yoshito Chikaraishi1M. Jake Vander Zanden2Center for Limnology University of Wisconsin‐Madison 680 N. Park Street Madison Wisconsin 53706 USAInstitute of Low Temperature Science Hokkaido University Kita‐19, Nishi‐8, Kita‐ku Sapporo 060‐0819 JapanCenter for Limnology University of Wisconsin‐Madison 680 N. Park Street Madison Wisconsin 53706 USAAbstract Over the last 100 yr, anthropogenic stressors have decimated the assemblage of deepwater coregonines that once underpinned the food webs of the Laurentian Great Lakes. As a part of ongoing restoration efforts, fisheries managers are interested in reintroducing deepwater coregonines from remnant populations to reestablish historical food web connections. However, little is known about historical trophic position and niche partitioning among deepwater coregonines in the Great Lakes. We used nitrogen stable isotope analysis of amino acids to compare trophic position of museum‐preserved (1920s) and present‐day forage fishes in Lakes Michigan and Superior. In the 1920s, deepwater coregonines exhibited clear trophic niche partitioning, with trophic positions spanning a full trophic level. Additionally, species trophic positions were tightly conserved between lakes. In Lake Superior, trophic niche partitioning has been maintained over the last 100 yr, but trophic position has shifted downward by ~0.5 trophic level. The more dramatic species loss in Lake Michigan corresponds with a sharp reduction in trophic niche breadth over time. Our study reveals remarkable trophic niche breadth among deepwater coregonines prior to the major anthropogenic impacts on the Laurentian Great Lakes and provides a food web benchmark for restoring the historical trophic diversity of this iconic species flock.https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.2080compound‐specificCoregonus speciesfood websLake MichiganLake Superiormuseum specimens
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chelsey Blanke
Yoshito Chikaraishi
M. Jake Vander Zanden
spellingShingle Chelsey Blanke
Yoshito Chikaraishi
M. Jake Vander Zanden
Historical niche partitioning and long‐term trophic shifts in Laurentian Great Lakes deepwater coregonines
Ecosphere
compound‐specific
Coregonus species
food webs
Lake Michigan
Lake Superior
museum specimens
author_facet Chelsey Blanke
Yoshito Chikaraishi
M. Jake Vander Zanden
author_sort Chelsey Blanke
title Historical niche partitioning and long‐term trophic shifts in Laurentian Great Lakes deepwater coregonines
title_short Historical niche partitioning and long‐term trophic shifts in Laurentian Great Lakes deepwater coregonines
title_full Historical niche partitioning and long‐term trophic shifts in Laurentian Great Lakes deepwater coregonines
title_fullStr Historical niche partitioning and long‐term trophic shifts in Laurentian Great Lakes deepwater coregonines
title_full_unstemmed Historical niche partitioning and long‐term trophic shifts in Laurentian Great Lakes deepwater coregonines
title_sort historical niche partitioning and long‐term trophic shifts in laurentian great lakes deepwater coregonines
publisher Wiley
series Ecosphere
issn 2150-8925
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Abstract Over the last 100 yr, anthropogenic stressors have decimated the assemblage of deepwater coregonines that once underpinned the food webs of the Laurentian Great Lakes. As a part of ongoing restoration efforts, fisheries managers are interested in reintroducing deepwater coregonines from remnant populations to reestablish historical food web connections. However, little is known about historical trophic position and niche partitioning among deepwater coregonines in the Great Lakes. We used nitrogen stable isotope analysis of amino acids to compare trophic position of museum‐preserved (1920s) and present‐day forage fishes in Lakes Michigan and Superior. In the 1920s, deepwater coregonines exhibited clear trophic niche partitioning, with trophic positions spanning a full trophic level. Additionally, species trophic positions were tightly conserved between lakes. In Lake Superior, trophic niche partitioning has been maintained over the last 100 yr, but trophic position has shifted downward by ~0.5 trophic level. The more dramatic species loss in Lake Michigan corresponds with a sharp reduction in trophic niche breadth over time. Our study reveals remarkable trophic niche breadth among deepwater coregonines prior to the major anthropogenic impacts on the Laurentian Great Lakes and provides a food web benchmark for restoring the historical trophic diversity of this iconic species flock.
topic compound‐specific
Coregonus species
food webs
Lake Michigan
Lake Superior
museum specimens
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.2080
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AT yoshitochikaraishi historicalnichepartitioningandlongtermtrophicshiftsinlaurentiangreatlakesdeepwatercoregonines
AT mjakevanderzanden historicalnichepartitioningandlongtermtrophicshiftsinlaurentiangreatlakesdeepwatercoregonines
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