Abstract

Species invasions are changing aquatic ecosystems worldwide. Submerged aquatic macrophytes control lake ecosystem processes through their direct and indirect interactions with other primary producers, but how these interactions may be altered by macrophyte species invasions in temperate lakes is poorly understood. We addressed whether invasive watermilfoil (IWM) altered standing crops and gross primary production (GPP) of other littoral primary producers (macrophytes, phytoplankton, attached algae, and periphyton) in littoral zones of six Michigan lakes through a paired-plot comparison study of sites with IWM (standardized abundance 7–56%) compared to those with little or no IWM (standardized abundance 0–2%). We found that primary producer standing crops and the GPP of epiphytes, phytoplankton, and benthic periphyton were variable among lakes and not significantly different between paired study plots. Macrophyte standing crops predicted rates of benthic periphyton GPP, and standing crops of all other primary producers across all study plots. Overall, our results suggest that the effects of IWM on other primary producers in littoral zones may be lake-specific, and are likely dependent on the density of IWM, or whether it is functionally similar to other native species that it replaces or co-exists with. Moreover, in lakes where IWM is established but does not dominate macrophyte assemblages, the effects on littoral zone productivity may be minimal. Instead, overall macrophyte biomass is the primary factor controlling the rates of production and biomass of the other littoral zone primary producers, as has long been understood and observed in lake ecosystems.

Highlights

  • Eurasian watermilfoil (Myriophyllum spicatum) is a globally important invasive aquatic macrophyte [1,2], which has spread across North America over the past century [3] from source populations traced back to Asia [4]

  • We found that presence of invasive watermilfoil (IWM) had limited effects on primary producer standing crops and

  • We found that presence of IWM had limited effects on primary producer standing crops and rates of primary production in the littoral zones in our study of north-temperate lakes

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Summary

Introduction

Eurasian watermilfoil (Myriophyllum spicatum) is a globally important invasive aquatic macrophyte [1,2], which has spread across North America over the past century [3] from source populations traced back to Asia [4]. Eurasian watermilfoil invades the shallow-water habitats of lakes, called littoral zones, where it can grow rapidly and build a canopy of shoots, suppressing other aquatic plants (macrophytes) below [5,6]. Eurasian watermilfoil is perennial, it exhibits an annual pattern of growth where in spring shoots grow rapidly to the water’s surface and branch profusely to establish dominance [7]. Eurasian watermilfoil can hybridize with the native northern watermilfoil (M. sibiricum) to create hybrids (Myriophyllum spicatum x sibiricum) that exhibit increased growth vigor and increased resistance or tolerance to herbicides [9,10,11].

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