VARYING EFFECTS OF LOW DISSOLVED-OXYGEN ON TROPHIC INTERACTIONS IN ANESTUARINE FOOD-WEB

Citation
Dl. Breitburg et al., VARYING EFFECTS OF LOW DISSOLVED-OXYGEN ON TROPHIC INTERACTIONS IN ANESTUARINE FOOD-WEB, Ecological monographs, 67(4), 1997, pp. 489-507
Citations number
80
Categorie Soggetti
Ecology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00129615
Volume
67
Issue
4
Year of publication
1997
Pages
489 - 507
Database
ISI
SICI code
0012-9615(1997)67:4<489:VEOLDO>2.0.ZU;2-I
Abstract
Ecological studies, including those focusing on coastal eutrophication , vary in the emphasis they place on species-level vs. ecosystem-level processes. The degree of variation among interacting species in their response to perturbations to the physical environment is likely to be important in determining when species-or population-level processes w ill strongly affect attributes measured at higher levels of ecological organization. We conducted mesocosm and small-scale laboratory experi ments to determine how low oxygen affects predation rates in a zooplan kton-fish larvae-larval predator food web typical of mesohaline areas in the Chesapeake Bay. Dissolved oxygen concentrations in bottom water s of the Chesapeake Bay decline during summer to levels that can be ph ysiologically stressful or lethal to animals dependent on aerobic resp iration. Our results indicate that the effects of low oxygen on trophi c interactions vary among interacting pairs of species in the food web studied. Low but nonlethal dissolved oxygen concentrations greatly in creased predation on fish larvae (mostly naked goby Gobiosoma bosc) by sea nettles (the scyphomedusan jellyfish Chrysaora quinquecirrha) but decreased predation by juvenile striped bass (Morone saxatilis). Pred ation by a single predator, the sea nettle, increased for fish larvae, decreased for fish eggs (Anchoa mitchilli), and was significantly but not strongly affected for copepods (mostly Acartia tonsa) at low diss olved oxygen concentrations. Changes in predator-prey interactions ref lected variation among species in their physiological tolerance to low oxygen and the effects of low oxygen on the escape behavior of prey, as well as on swimming and feeding behaviors of predators. Because of the variation in effects on trophic interactions, low dissolved oxygen has the potential to cause major alterations in the relative importan ce of different pathways of energy flow in the Chesapeake Bay and in o ther estuarine systems.