Abstract

We modeled energy transfer and trophic position of fish, plankton, and macroinvertebrates and the relative importance of top-down versus bottom-up processes in Lake Vortsjarv, a large shallow eutrophic lake in Estonia (northeastern Europe). We employed input values based on 37 years of biomass and fishing activity monitoring for calibrating the Ecopath with Ecosim (EwE) model. Energy flows from primary producers and detritus, represented by total system throughput, were nearly equal (51 and 49%, respectively). Simulation revealed that top-down and bottom-up forces were at play, metazooplankton was not efficiently grazing phytoplankton production, and a trophic cascade proceeded through macroinvertebrates rather than through zooplankton. Detritivory was responsible for the relatively low trophic position of Vortsjarv fish compared to other lakes. Bottom-up processes were the main drivers for the dual, primary production- and detritus-based pathways in energy flow. Our findings suggest that the predicted biomass increase of cyanobacteria in shallow lakes in the future will strengthen the reliance of consumers on the detrital pathway at the expense of the primary production pathway.

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