Contrasting response of two shallow lakes to a partial winterkill of fish
Document Type
Article
Journal/Book Title/Conference
Hydrobiologia
Volume
749
Issue
1
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Publication Date
5-1-2015
Keywords
anoxia, fish, regime shifts, roach, shallow lakes
First Page
31
Last Page
42
Abstract
Food-web effects of winterkill are difficult to predict as the enhanced mortality of planktivorous fish may be counterbalanced by an even higher mortality of piscivores. We hypothesised that a winterkill in a clear and a turbid shallow lake would equalise their fish community composition, but seasonal plankton successions would differ between lakes. After a partial winterkill, we observed a reduction of fish biomass by 16 and 43% in a clear-water and a turbid small temperate lake, respectively. Fish biomass and piscivore shares (5% of fish biomass) were similar in both lakes after this winterkill, but young-of-the-year (YOY) abundances were higher in the turbid lake. Top-down control by crustaceans was only partly responsible for low phytoplankton biomass at the end of May following the winterkill in both lakes. Summer phytoplankton biomass remained low in the clear-water lake despite high abundances of YOY fish (mainly roach). In contrast, the crustacean biomass of the turbid lake was reduced in summer by a high YOY abundance (sunbleak and roach), leading to a strong increase in phytoplankton biomass. The YOY abundance of fish in shallow eutrophic lakes may thus be more important for their summer phytoplankton development after winterkill than the relative abundance of piscivores.
Recommended Citation
Hilt, S., T. Wanke, K. Scharnweber, M. Brauns, J. Syväranta, S. Brothers, U. Gaedke, J. Köhler, B. Lischke, and T. Mehner, 2015. Contrasting response of two shallow lakes to a partial winterkill of fish. Hydrobiologia, doi: 10.1007/s10750-014-2143-7