Jewels for Dollars: Native and Nonnative Freshwater Fish Interactions in a Stressful Dry Down Environment

Vertebrate populations are subjected to novel anthropogenic stressors that are expected to multiply exponentially in the future. Introductions of nonnative species and human-altered hydrology are among these stressors to native species communities. The Rocky Glades, located in Everglades National Pa...

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Main Author: Trujillo, Vanessa
Format: Others
Published: FIU Digital Commons 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/etd/3212
http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4168&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-fiu.edu-oai-digitalcommons.fiu.edu-etd-41682018-01-05T15:29:06Z Jewels for Dollars: Native and Nonnative Freshwater Fish Interactions in a Stressful Dry Down Environment Trujillo, Vanessa Vertebrate populations are subjected to novel anthropogenic stressors that are expected to multiply exponentially in the future. Introductions of nonnative species and human-altered hydrology are among these stressors to native species communities. The Rocky Glades, located in Everglades National Park, may serve as a population sink for native species that typically do not survive the altered hydrology of the dry season, and as a source of nonnative species that may be better adapted to chronically stressful conditions. In the seasonally-flooded Everglades, the nonnative African Jewelfish invaded in the 1960s and has since shown rapid range expansion. African Jewelfish are aggressive and territorial, thus they are predicted to be more successful at acquiring space and resources, and may displace native Sunfishes. I monitored assemblages of fish across time in experimental mesocosms and solution holes and quantified survivorship and body condition of both natives and nonnatives. Overall, native Sunfish did poorly while nonnatives had higher survivorship over the course of the dry season. Unexpectedly, no evidence indicated that Jewelfish reduced survival of native Sunfish. I compared aggressive interactions between native Dollar Sunfish and nonnative African Jewelfish in Sunfish populations either sympatric or allopatric with Jewelfish. Sympatric Dollar Sunfish were twice as likely to approach African Jewelfish as allopatric ones. My study suggests native species can survive invasion through behavioral adaptation to nonnative competitors. Characterizing interactions between native and nonnative species and identifying their niche use can assist in understanding the challenges of native species conservation in the face of species invasions. 2017-03-27T07:00:00Z text application/pdf http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/etd/3212 http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4168&context=etd FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations FIU Digital Commons Everglades Nonnative Dollar Sunfish Lepomis marginatus African Jewelfish Hemichromis lexournoxi Behavior and Ethology Integrative Biology
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Everglades
Nonnative
Dollar Sunfish
Lepomis marginatus
African Jewelfish
Hemichromis lexournoxi
Behavior and Ethology
Integrative Biology
spellingShingle Everglades
Nonnative
Dollar Sunfish
Lepomis marginatus
African Jewelfish
Hemichromis lexournoxi
Behavior and Ethology
Integrative Biology
Trujillo, Vanessa
Jewels for Dollars: Native and Nonnative Freshwater Fish Interactions in a Stressful Dry Down Environment
description Vertebrate populations are subjected to novel anthropogenic stressors that are expected to multiply exponentially in the future. Introductions of nonnative species and human-altered hydrology are among these stressors to native species communities. The Rocky Glades, located in Everglades National Park, may serve as a population sink for native species that typically do not survive the altered hydrology of the dry season, and as a source of nonnative species that may be better adapted to chronically stressful conditions. In the seasonally-flooded Everglades, the nonnative African Jewelfish invaded in the 1960s and has since shown rapid range expansion. African Jewelfish are aggressive and territorial, thus they are predicted to be more successful at acquiring space and resources, and may displace native Sunfishes. I monitored assemblages of fish across time in experimental mesocosms and solution holes and quantified survivorship and body condition of both natives and nonnatives. Overall, native Sunfish did poorly while nonnatives had higher survivorship over the course of the dry season. Unexpectedly, no evidence indicated that Jewelfish reduced survival of native Sunfish. I compared aggressive interactions between native Dollar Sunfish and nonnative African Jewelfish in Sunfish populations either sympatric or allopatric with Jewelfish. Sympatric Dollar Sunfish were twice as likely to approach African Jewelfish as allopatric ones. My study suggests native species can survive invasion through behavioral adaptation to nonnative competitors. Characterizing interactions between native and nonnative species and identifying their niche use can assist in understanding the challenges of native species conservation in the face of species invasions.
author Trujillo, Vanessa
author_facet Trujillo, Vanessa
author_sort Trujillo, Vanessa
title Jewels for Dollars: Native and Nonnative Freshwater Fish Interactions in a Stressful Dry Down Environment
title_short Jewels for Dollars: Native and Nonnative Freshwater Fish Interactions in a Stressful Dry Down Environment
title_full Jewels for Dollars: Native and Nonnative Freshwater Fish Interactions in a Stressful Dry Down Environment
title_fullStr Jewels for Dollars: Native and Nonnative Freshwater Fish Interactions in a Stressful Dry Down Environment
title_full_unstemmed Jewels for Dollars: Native and Nonnative Freshwater Fish Interactions in a Stressful Dry Down Environment
title_sort jewels for dollars: native and nonnative freshwater fish interactions in a stressful dry down environment
publisher FIU Digital Commons
publishDate 2017
url http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/etd/3212
http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4168&context=etd
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