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Establishing the structure of aquatic food webs in managed extensive ponds www.seafareproject.eu • Monoculture - Single manufactured food source – expensive + ethical arguments of fishmeal - Water quality more unstable due to nutrient inputs from food - Water quality controlled by water exchange (expensive) - Nutrients in effluent can exceed legal limits (fines) - Disease more likely to spread in monoculture as all fish are the same. www.seafareproject.eu Extensive eco-aquaculture • No feeding – cheaper • Good water quality – plants and microalgae absorbing nutrients • Water quality more stable → predators eating algae • Less stress on fish etc. • Less chance of disease • High fish/shrimp quality • Better prices for products • No nutrients in effluents www.seafareproject.eu Importance of the food web 1. Need to know the diet of your target fish/shrimp in case of problems. 2. Important is the % reliance on single prey source – can cause. instability1. 3. If you are targeting more than one organism – there maybe interactions. 4. May want to improve quality of fish – by manipulating diet. 5. Might want to relieve predation pressure on a target species 1McCann, www.seafareproject.eu K.S. (2000) The diversity–stability debate. Nature 405, 228-233 We used chemical tracers – the isotopes of C and N Generally an animal’s isotope signal reflects the prey that it has eaten C increases 0-1‰ In this example we assume equal consumption and C increase is zero www.seafareproject.eu We used chemical tracers – the isotopes of C and N Generally an animal’s isotope signal reflects the prey that it has eaten C increases 0-1‰ In this example we assume equal consumption and C increase is zero N normally increases ~ 3‰ at each trophic level So N can be used to indicate whether animal is carnivore, herbivore etc. www.seafareproject.eu Isotopes can: 1. Identify dietary sources 2. Identify trophic level 3. When used inconjunction with isotopic models like • Isosource or SIAR can identify percentage contribution of each dietary source • Isoweb – can dietary contributions for the entire food web 4. Trophic niche width 5. When used with stomach contents analysis or other tracers such as fatty acids, uncertainty can be reduced. www.seafareproject.eu Phragmites australis Spartina densiflora Ruppia maritima Phytoplankton Biofilm + Sediments www.seafareproject.eu Polychaetes Isopods Amphipods Chironomids Pol www.seafareproject.eu Ostracod Zooplankton www.seafareproject.eu www.seafareproject.eu www.seafareproject.eu www.seafareproject.eu www.seafareproject.eu www.seafareproject.eu www.seafareproject.eu Isotopes can help us understand the links The full food web has many other connections (avifauna, reptiles, …) Top Consumers are human www.seafareproject.eu Examples of isotope use Spartina vs Phragmites Invasion of Spartina means that it has now colonised 90% of pond verges that used be occupie chiefly by Phragmites. Contribution of the 2 species approx. equal despite Spartina dominance – suggests not much Spartina productivity enters the pond ecosystem. Average of 8 Species Averaged contribution of primary producers Dicentrarchus spp. P. macrodactylus (L=5,TL=3.47) (L=4,TL=2.64) Using isotopes we trace where the C and N in our commercial species came from www.seafareproject.eu Prey POM Sediment Phragmites Biofilm Spartina Ruppia POM Sediment Phragmites Biofilm Spartina Ruppia POM Sediment Biofilm Phragmites Spartina Ruppia Freq. Signif. Low95% High95% 100 5.6 41.8 100 0.4 35.1 100 0.6 31.5 50 0.04 31.9 100 0.3 26.4 0 0 21.6 100 7.5 38.6 100 2.5 37.6 100 2.3 31.9 100 0.8 31.8 40 0.1 21.9 20 0.03 20.6 6.2 37.8 1.3 35.2 1.0 32.6 1.2 29.5 1.4 26.7 0.1 23.3 Mode 24.4 21.0 19.9 16.9 14.9 3.4 24.5 21.8 19.0 18.4 9.9 7.0 23.0 20.0 17.5 15.4 13.3 7.8 Mean 24.3 18.8 17.2 16.3 13.9 9.5 23.7 21.1 17.9 17.0 10.9 9.4 22.6 19.1 17.3 15.7 14.2 11.1 Importance of shrimp to the food web Mullet diet 21% shrimp Mugilidae (L=5, n=25) Bass diet 19% shrimp 5% mullet Dicentrarchus spp. (L=5, n=38) 95 tonnes/year harvested using nasa traps but:- www.seafareproject.eu Prey Freq. Signif. Pomatoschistus spp. 100 G. affinis 100 F. heteroclitus 60 P. macrodactylus 33 Amphipods 40 C. carpio 20 P. varians 20 Mugilidae 20 P. varians 60 Ostracods 80 Amphipods 20 Polychaetes 0 T. verticalis 0 Chironomids 0 Mysids 20 Cladocerans 20 P. macrodactylus 75 Biofilm 0 Copepods 33 Low95% 3.1 0.6 0.6 0.06 0.8 0.01 0.01 0.06 0.2 0.5 0.002 0 0 0 0 0.01 0.3 0 0.005 High95% 32.1 32.8 28.2 25.8 22.9 23.9 22.1 20.9 20.7 20.2 19.3 19.0 18.6 18.7 18.6 18.0 15.6 17.5 17.3 Mode 17.8 18.5 14.0 13.0 8.0 8.2 5.9 4.9 12.0 11.3 9.9 8.0 7.5 7.8 6.9 5.2 9.3 4.2 4.6 Mean 18.0 17.7 14.8 13.1 11.2 11.2 9.9 9.4 10.9 10.9 9.6 9.4 9.1 9.1 9.1 8.6 8.6 8.2 8.1 Conclusions Food web knowledge can be used to: 1. Enable informed decision making regarding harvest rates 2. Help correct productivity problems 3. Improve quality of harvested fish/shrimp 4. Assess benefits of reducing predation pressure on a harvested species www.seafareproject.eu Thank you for your attention! Email: [email protected] www.seafareproject.eu