AI Article Synopsis

  • Freshwater inputs and grazing by zebra mussels are key factors influencing the food web of the Hudson River estuary, with both having significant impacts.
  • High water flow typically lowers population sizes across the food web, while zebra mussel grazing decreases plankton populations but increases those in shallow areas, likely due to enhanced water clarity.
  • The study found that the effects of freshwater inputs and zebra mussel grazing are comparable in strength, indicating complex interactions where grazing affects how sensitive different parts of the food web are to changes in freshwater availability.

Article Abstract

Inputs of fresh water and grazing both can control aquatic food webs, but little is known about the relative strengths of and interactions between these controls. We use long-term data on the food web of the freshwater Hudson River estuary to investigate the importance of, and interactions between, inputs of fresh water and grazing by the invasive zebra mussel (Dreissena polymorpha). Both freshwater inputs and zebra mussel grazing have strong, pervasive effects on the Hudson River food web. High flow tended to reduce population size in most parts of the food web. High grazing also reduced populations in the planktonic food web, but increased populations in the littoral food web, probably as a result of increases in water clarity. The influences of flow and zebra mussel grazing were roughly equal (i.e., within a factor of 2) for many variables over the period of our study. Zebra mussel grazing made phytoplankton less sensitive to freshwater inputs, but water clarity and the littoral food web more sensitive to freshwater inputs, showing that interactions between these two controlling factors can be strong and varied.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1890/07-0979.1DOI Listing

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