Abstract

Mechanisms of the displacement of native fish by nonnative fish can include agonistic behaviors that push native fish species out of their preferred habitat, including their thermal optima. To examine these interactions, we built an experimental thermal preference chamber to evaluate: (1) the thermal preference of native, glacial relict northern redbelly dace Chrosomus eos; (2) if the thermal preference and movement changed in the presence of the invasive western mosquitofish Gambusia affinis; and (3) the direction of agonistic interactions. We hypothesized that G. affinis would express agonistic behavior toward C. eos, because G. affinis is widely recognized as an aggressive invader. Given the temperature range of the experimental chamber, i.e., 20–30 °C, C. eos selected an average of 24.3 °C as its thermal preference. After G. affinis’ introduction, the thermal preference of C. eos increased by 1.7 °C and the movement, given by distance (cm) travelled, increased by 21%. Contrary to our prediction, more agonistic interactions were observed in C. eos toward G. affinis. These results indicate that agonistic behavior of G. affinis toward native fish species may be species- and condition-specific, and may not always be the primary mechanism of native species’ displacement. Biological invasions are a global issue and altered thermal regimes are expected to continue. This study provided the novel approach using of a thermally heterogeneous thermal chamber to examine thermal preferences and aggressive interactions between a native and an invasive species. Future research should examine other life history traits that may be conveying the competitive advantage to G. affinis.

Highlights

  • Nonnative fish are implicated in the demise of native fish globally, but a mechanistic understanding of how displacements take place is often lacking [1,2,3]

  • Trials were conducted in a thermal preference chamber to determine: (1) the thermal preference of C. eos, (2) if the thermal preference changed with the addition of the invasive G. affinis, and (3) the direction of agonistic interactions

  • We considered effects of explanatory covariates (i.e., G. affinis introductions and C. eos body size) statistically significant when >95% of posterior samples were either positive or negative; we report the proportion of posterior samples (PPS) that were in the same direction as the posterior mean value

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Summary

Introduction

Nonnative fish are implicated in the demise of native fish globally, but a mechanistic understanding of how displacements take place is often lacking [1,2,3]. A suite of ecological traits confer competitive advantages to G. affinis, including broad physiological tolerances (i.e., eurythermic) and high fecundity [15,16], but their aggressive behaviors are considered a key mechanism in native fish’s displacement [17,18,19]. These agonistic interactions can result in an increased movement, which is an energetic cost that can require fish to consume more food [20], increase predation risk [21], and reduce growth [22]. Trials were conducted in a thermal preference chamber to determine: (1) the thermal preference of C. eos, (2) if the thermal preference changed with the addition of the invasive G. affinis, and (3) the direction of agonistic interactions

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Experimental Apparatus
Experimental Fish Trials
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