**The title, authors, and abstract for this completion
report are provided below. For a copy of the completion report, please contact
the GLFC via e-mail or via telephone at
734-662-3209**
EXOTIC
INVERTEBRATES, FOOD-WEB DISRUPTION, AND LOST FISH PRODUCTION:
UNDERSTANDING
IMPACTS OF DREISSENID AND CLADOCOCERA INVADERS ON LOWER-LAKES
FISH COMMUNITIES
AND FORECASTING INVASION IMPACTS ON UPPER LAKES FISH COMMUNITIES
Brian J. Shuter1 and Doran Mason2
1 Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology,
University of Toronto,
25 Harbord Street,
Toronto, Ont M5S 3G5
email: shuter@zoo.utoronto.ca
2 NOAA
Great Lakes Environmental Laboratory
2205 Commonwealth Blvd
Ann Arbor, MI 48105
email:
Doran.Mason@noaa.gov
ABSTRACT
Development and coordination of a Research Theme on the disruption
of Great Lakes
food webs by invertebrate invaders was carried out over the years from 2000 to
2006. A White Paper was prepared in 2001 that justified focusing research
funding on this issue and laid out initial priorities for research. Four workshops
and 1 Symposium were organized over this same period to promote information
exchange among scientists working in the field and to re-evaluate and modify
the research directions defined in the original White Paper. In addition,
research was carried out on the role of spatial heterogeneity in shaping
aquatic food web structure, and particularly on its role in shaping the
sensitivity of existing food webs to invertebrate invasions. This research led
to the production of four peer-reviewed publications and 1 Ph.D. thesis. A
brief summary of each follows: (i) Noonburg, Shuter and Abrams 2003: the authors show that the
effects of spatial structure on the intensity of within-basin turbulent mixing
can produce large differences in the direct and indirect effects of zebra
mussel filtering on both phytoplankton and zooplankton dynamics; (ii) Byers and
Noonburg 2003: the authors show that the spatial
scale of an invasion study can have a strong effect on its results: a negative
relationship between invasion success and indigenous species diversity at a
small spatial scale can, under reasonable assumptions, convert into a positive
relationship at larger spatial scales; (iii) Noonburg
and Abrams 2003: the authors show that an invasion by a predator-resistant prey
species can lead to the extinction of native prey species; (iv) Noonburg and Byers 2005: the authors show that the
extinction of native prey can be driven by the positive effect that an invading
prey species can have on a native predator; (v) Richards PhD Thesis, expected
completion – spring 2007: the author shows that the fine scale spatial
patterning in phytoplankton and zooplankton communities, in both relatively
small and relatively large water bodies, is an important factor determine the
rate of trophic transfer from phytoplankton to
zooplankton.