Effects of dams on downstream molluscan predator-prey interactions in the Colorado River estuary.

Proc Biol Sci

Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA.

Published: May 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • River systems have been significantly altered for human use, leading to poorly understood ecological impacts downstream.
  • In the Colorado River estuary, reduced freshwater input has resulted in a drastic 94% decline in clam populations, affecting predator species that rely on them for food.
  • Research shows that key predators adapted by switching prey, but overall declines in available prey biomass signal substantial changes in the benthic food web, a trend likely mirrored in estuaries globally due to similar water management practices.

Article Abstract

River systems worldwide have been modified for human use and the downstream ecological consequences are often poorly understood. In the Colorado River estuary, where upstream water diversions have limited freshwater input during the last century, mollusc remains from the last several hundred years suggest widespread ecological change. The once abundant clam has undergone population declines of approximately 94% and populations of predators relying on this species as a food source have probably declined, switched to alternative prey species or both. We distinguish between the first two hypotheses using a null model of predation preference to test whether was preyed upon selectively by the naticid snail, , along the estuary's past salinity gradient. To evaluate the third hypothesis, we estimate available prey biomass today and in the past, assuming prey were a limiting resource. Data on the frequency of drill holes-identifiable traces of naticid predation on prey shells-showed several species, including , were preferred prey. was probably able to switch prey. Available prey biomass also declined, suggesting the population probably also declined. These results indicate a substantial change to the structure of the benthic food web. Given the global scale of water management, such changes have probably also occurred in many of the world's estuaries.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5998093PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2018.0724DOI Listing

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