Abstract

The North American invasion of a non-native mysid, Hemimysis anomala, has been expanding since 2006, with the first inland lake invasions detected for Oneida Lake in 2009 and Seneca Lake in 2010. Although we know that Hemimysis primarily consumes zooplankton, our ability to predict the community-level impact of an invasion is hampered by a lack of information on taxon-specific effects. To investigate the effects of Hemimysis on native zooplankton, we conducted two mesocosm experiments that compared composition between communities with and without Hemimysis and studied how the effects of this predator on zooplankton species composition varied across a natural gradient of low to high invader densities (0.01–0.1 individuals·L−1). Our first experiment found that Hemimysis primarily affected cladocerans, and particularly Daphnia, shifting communities towards dominance by copepods. Our second experiment showed that Hemimysis invasions may do little to suppress Daphnia abundances until between 0.067–0.11 individuals·L−1 or higher. Cladocerans are important links in freshwater trophic transfer and the nutrient cycle, and disruption of these linkages following Hemimysis invasion could result in both bottom-up and top-down impacts in nearshore food webs. However, Hemimysis can also fill a similar trophic role as the zooplankton they consume, and longer-term experiments are required to better assess their eventual impacts on native communities.

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