INVESTIGADORES
BARRIGA juan pablo
artículos
Título:
Quantifying Predation on Galaxiids and Other Native Organisms by Introduced Rainbow Trout in an Ultraoligotrophic Lake in Northern Patagonia, Argentina: a Bioenergetics Modeling Approach
Autor/es:
VIGLIANO, PABLO; BEAUCHAMP, DAVID; MILANO, DANIELA; MACCHI, PATRICIO; ALONSO, MARCELO; GARCÍA-ASOREY, MARTÍN; DENEGRI, MARÍA; CIANCIO, JAVIER; LIPPOLT, GUSTAVO; RECHENCQ, MAGALÍ; BARRIGA, JUAN
Revista:
Transactions of the American Fisheries Society
Editorial:
American Fisheries Society
Referencias:
Lugar: Bethesda, MD; Año: 2009 vol. 138 p. 1405 - 1419
ISSN:
0002-8487
Resumen:
Exotic rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss support an economically valuable recreational fishery in Patagonia but also create concern for impacts on native organisms. These concerns are intensified by the possibility of hatchery release programs in this region. We estimated losses of different prey from predation by rainbow trout in Lake Moreno, Rý´o Negro Province, Argentina, using a bioenergetics model combined with input data from directed sampling on growth, seasonal diet, distribution, and thermal experience. The fish community was sampled seasonally using gill nets, hydroacoustics, and ichthyoplanktonnets. Pelagic galaxiid larvae and benthic juvenile and adult small puyen Galaxias maculatus were the most important components of the diet. Bioenergetics simulations showed that over a 6-year life span in the lake (ages 1–7), rainbow trout attained a body mass of 2.3 kg and consumed 74.7 kg of food, of which 20% consisted of galaxiid larvae and 16% consisted of adult small puyen. Based on an estimated abundance of 29,000 rainbow trout of ages 1–7, this predator exerted significant but sustainable mortality on the native prey populations, consuming 44 metric tons or an estimated 23% of the annual larval galaxiid production and 35 metric tons of adult small puyen, which represented an unknown fraction of the postlarval population. Galaxiids supported the estimated predation demand under current conditions. However, simulations of stocking strategies normally proposed for this region showed that consumption demands on prey would increase to unsustainable levels, reducing native fish populations and likely reducing growth of rainbow trout. It is also probable that the fish community composition would shift further in response to the increased demand for prey by stocked predators. This implies that in some cases, stocking could jeopardize sport fisheries; stocking strategies should be evaluated on a case-by-case basis to be consistent with specific objectives for native fish conservation and sustainable food web interactions.