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Olenin, S. Daunys, D., 2005. Invaders in suspension-feeder systems: variations along the regional environmental gradient and similarities between large basins. In: Dame, R. and Olenin, S. (ed-s). The Comparative Roles of Suspension-Feeders in Ecosystems. NATO Science Series. Earth and Environmental Series – Vol. 47. Springer, 2005: 221-237 221 INVADERS IN SUSPENSION-FEEDER SYSTEMS: VARIATIONS ALONG THE REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL GRADIENT AND SIMILARITIES BETWEEN LARGE BASINS Sergej Olenin, Darius Daunys Coastal Research and Planning Institute, Klaipeda University, Klaipeda, Lithuania Abstract: Biological invasions increasingly alter taxonomical and functional structure of benthic communities. Among the invasive benthic invertebrates, the suspension-feeders are the most widespread type. Species belonging to that trophic group constitute from half to two thirds of total invasive species in various European seas. The importance of the alien suspension-feeders is particularly obvious in evolutionary young, species poor brackish water bodies, such as the Baltic Sea. We analyzed changes in suspension-feeder systems formed by both alien and native species along the salinity and depth gradients from a river mouth (the Curonian Lagoon) down to the halocline area of the Baltic Proper. There was a clear shift in the biomass dominance from the alien species in the lagoon to the native suspension-feeders in the sea. Both the native and alien obligatory suspension-feeders occupied shallow coastal marine and lagoon habitats and did not form stable communities below the 30 m depth. Key words: bioinvasions, trophic guilds, salinity gradient, functional homogenization INTRODUCTION Biological invasions mix previously isolated organisms on global scale causing their genetic, taxonomic and functional homogenization (Leppäkoski et al. 2002a, Olden et al. 2004). This human-mediated addition to local fauna and flora is defined as xenodiversity (Gr. xenos – strange) to indicate diversity caused by non-indigenous, invasive species (Leppäkoski and Olenin 2000a). The influence of xenodiversity is traced at different hierarchical levels of biological organization, including functional/community level due to alterations of food webs and ecosystem functioning, emergence Olenin, S. Daunys, D., 2005. Invaders in suspension-feeder systems:variations along the regional environmental gradient and similarities between large basins. In: Dame, R. and Olenin, S. (ed-s). The Comparative Roles of Suspension-Feeders in Ecosystems. NATO Science Series. Earth and Environmental Series – Vol. 47. Springer, 2005: 221-237 222 of novel functions, and changes in structure of trophic/functional guilds (e.g. Olenin and Leppäkoski 1999; Karatayev et al. 2002; Ojaveer et al. 2002; Baltic Sea Alien Species Database 2003, and references therein). The importance of biological invasions in alteration of trophic structure of benthic communities is especially obvious in evolutionarily young, species-poor water bodies, such as the Baltic Sea (Leppäkoski et al. 2002b). In this study, we consider the suspension-feeding systems formed by both alien and native species along environmental gradients from a river mouth (the Curonian Lagoon) down to the halocline area of the Baltic Proper. The studied habitats differ in topography, substrate, hydrological regime, biological communities as well as the level and type of human impact. Analysis of the structural changes along such gradients can give insights into how physical and biological features of habitats influence the suspensionfeeder systems and their susceptibility to invasion. Although many recent works address functional changes in benthic communities caused by invasion on a local scale (e.g. Zettler 1996; Karatayev et al. 2002) the broader; basin wide aspect of these changes is still lacking. In this study, we assess the trophic guild composition of invaders in different geographical regions, investigating how common suspension feeding is among the invasive benthic invertebrate species. Thus, we consider two aspects of structural change in the benthic communities, caused by the invasion of suspension-feeding invertebrates: 1) suspension-feeder systems formed by both invasive and native species at the scale of a regional habitat gradient (“invasive versus native”), and 2) suspension-feeding as one of the trophic types of invasive invertebrate groups at the basin wide scale. MATERIALS AND METHODS Study Sites Along the Southeastern Baltic Environmental Gradient We considered suspension-feeder systems in seven habitats along an environmental gradient in the southeastern part of the Baltic Sea (Fig. 1). The Curonian Lagoon is a large shallow (mean depth 3.8 m) coastal water body connected to the Sea by a narrow (400 m) strait (Klaipeda port area), which is artificially deepened down to 14 m. In the open sea, the depths ranged from ca. 5 m in the coastal zone down to 80 m in the halocline area (Table 1). In the Lagoon, there is a gradient in mean annual salinity from the Klaipeda Strait (STR, Fig. 1) through the northern part (LAG) towards the central area (DEL). The later is under strong freshwater influence of the Nemunas River. Episodic inflows of the sea water cause irregular rapid (hours-days) salinity fluctuations in the Strait and to a less extent, in the Olenin, S. Daunys, D., 2005. Invaders in suspension-feeder systems:variations along the regional environmental gradient and similarities between large basins. In: Dame, R. and Olenin, S. (ed-s). The Comparative Roles of Suspension-Feeders in Ecosystems. NATO Science Series. Earth and Environmental Series – Vol. 47. Springer, 2005: 221-237 223 northern part of the Lagoon (Daunys 2001 and references therein). In the Sea, the salinity is relatively uniform and stable down to approximately 55 m, increasing in the halocline zone (ca. 55-80 m). Temperature range is most variable in the Curonian Lagoon and more stable in the halocline area. In summer, the coastal marine areas (COS, COH) are within a warm upper layer of water, while the intermediate depth zone (INT) lays beneath the summer thermocline (ca. 25-30 m) within the cold intermediate water layer (Olenin 1997a and references therein). In winter, the Lagoon (except the strait) is covered by ice. In the sea the ice occurs only as a narrow (less than several tens of m) stripe along the shoreline. Fig. 1. Study sites in the southeastern part of the Baltic Sea: DEL (delta) – the central part of the Curonian Lagoon in front of the Nemunas River mouth; LAG (Lagoon) – the northern part of the Lagoon; STR (strait) – the outlet of the Curonian Lagoon (Klaipeda Strait); COS (coastal soft bottoms); COH (coastal hard bottoms); INT (intermediate depth zone); HAL (halocline area). The main bottom sediments in the Lagoon are sand and silt, on sites with shell deposits (mainly of invasive bivalve Dreissena polymorpha and native gastropods of the genus Valvata). In the Klaipeda strait, the bottom sediments are greatly influenced by constant dredging for the waterway Olenin, S. Daunys, D., 2005. Invaders in suspension-feeder systems:variations along the regional environmental gradient and similarities between large basins. In: Dame, R. and Olenin, S. (ed-s). The Comparative Roles of Suspension-Feeders in Ecosystems. NATO Science Series. Earth and Environmental Series – Vol. 47. Springer, 2005: 221-237 224 maintenance. In the Sea, there is a well defined depth dependent gradient in distribution of bottom substrates, from sand (COS, Fig. 1) and mixture of stones and gravel (COH) in the coastal zone to silt in the intermediate zone (INT) and mud with clay in the halocline area (HAL). Wave exposure is the most important factor shaping stony and sandy bottom biotopes and bottom macrofauna communities in the coastal zone (COS, COH), where the wave height may reach up to 8 m. The waves and near-shore currents transport sand and gravel, that cause strong abrasive effects on benthic organisms in the uppermost part (<10 m depth) of the coastal slope (Olenin 1997b, and references therein). Eutrophication is recognized as the most serious environmental problem in the Curonian Lagoon and in the coastal areas of the southeastern Baltic (Olenina and Olenin 2002). Heavy blue-green algae blooms are usual phenomena in summer and early autumn, especially in the Lagoon. However, due to intensive mixing of water there is no oxygen deficiency in all studied sites except the halocline area, where the oxygen content drops sharply from 6-9.5 (saturation 70-100%) to 2 ml/l (saturation <20 %) causing permanent hypoxia in the lower part of the halocline (Olenin 1997a). Table 1. Environmental changes along the salinity and depth gradients from the Curonian Lagoon to the halocline area of the Baltic Sea*. The study sites abbreviations shown in Fig. 1. DEL Depth range, m 1-3 Salinity range, PSU <0.5 Temperature range, °C 0-24 LAG 1-3 0.0-3.0 0-24 STR 5-14 0.5-7.5 0-22 COS 5-30 6.0-8.0 COH 5-30 INT HAL Study site Bottom substrate Wave exposure Anthropogenic disturbance Sand, silt, shell deposits Sand, silt, shell deposits Sand, moraine clay, artificial hard substrates Moderate Eutrophication Weakmoderate Weak Eutrophication 0-20 Sand 6.0-8.0 0-20 30-55 7.0-8.8 0-11 Stones, gravel Silt 55-80 8.0-10.5 3-6 Mud, clay Strongmoderate Strongmoderate Weaknone None Eutrophication, dredging, industrial and municipal wastes Oxygen deficiency * Based on Olenin 1997a; Daunys 2001 and references therein Thus, there were two well defined environmental gradients in the study area: one related to the salinity change, from the fully lacustrine or riverine in the Lagoon’s delta area to the mesohaline conditions of the open Olenin, S. Daunys, D., 2005. Invaders in suspension-feeder systems:variations along the regional environmental gradient and similarities between large basins. In: Dame, R. and Olenin, S. (ed-s). The Comparative Roles of Suspension-Feeders in Ecosystems. NATO Science Series. Earth and Environmental Series – Vol. 47. Springer, 2005: 221-237 225 sea habitats, and another one associated with the depth dependent changes in hydrodynamic activity and bottom substrates, from the coastal areas down to the halocline zone. Sampling of Benthic Macrofauna The quantitative data used for the analysis of structural changes in suspension-feeder systems along the environmental gradient were extracted from the database on benthic macrofauna of the Curonian Lagoon and the southeastern part of the Baltic Sea (Olenin and Daunys, unpublished). In the Lagoon, the field material has been collected in May and October-November between 1980 and 2001 using a 0.025 m² Petersen-type grab. In the Baltic, collections were made in April and August between 1981 and 2002 using the 0.1 m² Van Veen type grab. On stony bottoms, the samples were obtained by scraping of macrofauna from the measured surface of boulders lifted by the grab or a SCUBA diver. All samples were washed through a 0.5 mm mesh sieve and preserved with 4 % formalin neutralized with NaHCO3. Further treatment of material was performed according to a standard procedure (HELCOM 1988). All groups of suspension-feeders were identified to species level. Biomass was determined as formalin wet weight (g m-2). A total of 549 samples were analyzed, quantitative data were averaged for each of the habitats. Trophic Classification of Benthic Invertebrates Trophic classification of benthic invertebrates found in the Baltic Sea was based on works of Turpaeva (1953), Fauchald and Jumars (1979), Järvekülg (1979), Kuznetzov (1980), Lee and Swartz (1980), TsikhonLukanina (1987) and Pearson (2001) with modifications discussed in our earlier papers (Olenin 1997a, c; Olenin and Leppäkoski 1999). Some species (e.g. polychaetes Nereis diversicolor and Pygospio elegans, gastropods Valvata piscinalis and Viviparus viviparus, bivalve Macoma balthica, etc) are known to use more than one feeding mode, e.g. to get particles from the water column (by filtering or using mucus nets) and also collect detritus from the surface of the bottom sediments (Fauchald and Jumars 1979; Kuznetzov 1980; Tsikhon-Lukanina 1987). These species were defined as “facultative suspension-feeders” to distinguish them from those which exclusively suspension-feed, i.e. “obligatory suspension-feeders”, such as the bivalve Mytilus edulis trossulus, the barnacle Balanus improvisus or the bryozoan Electra crustulenta. In our analysis we considered only true benthic dwelling species, excluding the mobile nektobenthic crustaceans (such as amphipods Pontoporeia femorata, Bathyporeia pilosa, Chaetogammarus ischnus and Corophium volutator and the mysids Limnomysis benedeni and Paramysis lacustris). Olenin, S. Daunys, D., 2005. Invaders in suspension-feeder systems:variations along the regional environmental gradient and similarities between large basins. In: Dame, R. and Olenin, S. (ed-s). The Comparative Roles of Suspension-Feeders in Ecosystems. NATO Science Series. Earth and Environmental Series – Vol. 47. Springer, 2005: 221-237 226 To estimate the proportion of obligatory and facultative suspensionfeeders among invaders, we used recently published lists of invasive species in the Baltic Sea including Kattegat (Leppäkoski and Olenin 2000b; Baltic Sea Alien Species Database 2003), North Sea including Skagerrak (Reise et al. 2002), Black Sea including the Sea of Azov (Gomoiu et al. 2002) and the Caspian Sea (Aladin et al. 2002). Trophic classification of these species was based on the same principles as those used in the Baltic Sea. Statistical Analysis The similarity analysis of the suspension-feeder species composition in different habitats along the southeastern Baltic environmental gradients was performed using multidimensional scaling (MDS) procedure in Primer software (Plymouth Marine Laboratory, Clarke and Warwick 1994). RESULTS Changes in Suspension-feeder Systems Along the Salinity and Depth Gradients in the Southeastern Baltic Sea Species Composition The suspension-feeding benthic macrofauna in the Curonian Lagoon and the southeastern Baltic Sea was represented by 30 species: 17 of them were defined as obligatory and 13 as facultative (Table 2). All polychaetes, hydroids, crustaceans, bryozoans and four bivalves (Mytilus edulis trossulus, Cerastoderma lamarcki, Mya arenaria and Macoma balthica) are euryhaline marine or brackish water species, while the rest of bivalves and all gastropods are of freshwater origin. There are six invasive species within the studied systems: three obligatory (Cordylophora caspia, Balanus improvisus, Dreissena polymorpha and M. arenaria) and two facultative (Marenzelleria viridis and Lithoglyphus naticoides) suspensionfeeders. The highest total species richness within the studied suspensionfeeder systems was found in the northern part of the Lagoon (LAG, 20 species) and in the delta area (DEL, 19 species), mainly due to presence of the freshwater bivalves and gastropods (Fig. 2). In these habitats, the only brackish water suspension-feeders were the invasive species: the hydrozoan C. caspia and the polychaete M. viridis. The number of invasive species in these two habitats was comparatively low: 3 - 4 species. The highest ratio of invasive to native species was in the Klaipeda strait (STR): 5 to 6, respectively. In the marine habitats (COS, COH and INT) the number of invasive species was the same as inside the Lagoon (3 – 4 species), while in Olenin, S. Daunys, D., 2005. Invaders in suspension-feeder systems:variations along the regional environmental gradient and similarities between large basins. In: Dame, R. and Olenin, S. (ed-s). The Comparative Roles of Suspension-Feeders in Ecosystems. NATO Science Series. Earth and Environmental Series – Vol. 47. Springer, 2005: 221-237 227 Sabellariidae CRUSTACEA Cirripediae GASTROPODA Bithyniidae Lithoglyphidae Valvatidae Viviparidae BIVALVIA Dreissenidae Mytilidae Cardiidae Myidae Tellinidae Unionidae Sphaeriidae Balanus improvisus O Bithynia tentaculata B. leachi Lithoglyphus naticoides Valvata klinensis V. piscinalis V. pulchella V. trochoidea Viviparus viviparus V. contectus F F F F F F F F F Dreissena polymorpha Mytilus edulis trossulus Cerastoderma lamarcki Mya arenaria Macoma balthica Unio tumidus U. pictorum Anodonta cygnea A. piscinalis Sphaerium corneum S. nitidum Pisidium amnicum Euglesa sp. O O O O F O O O O O O O O Electra crustulenta O X DEL F F F O O LAG Nereis diversicolor Pygospio elegans Marenzelleria viridis Fabricia sabella Manayunkia aestuarina STR O COS Cordylophora caspia COH HYDROZOA Clavidae POLYCHAETA Nereidae Spionidae Species INT TAXON/Family O F HAL Table 2. Composition of native and invasive (highlighted) obligatory (O) and facultative (F) benthic suspension-feeders in the southeastern Baltic habitats (HAL-DEL, see Fig. 1) X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X Olenin, S. Daunys, D., 2005. Invaders in suspension-feeder systems:variations along the regional environmental gradient and similarities between large basins. In: Dame, R. and Olenin, S. (ed-s). The Comparative Roles of Suspension-Feeders in Ecosystems. NATO Science Series. Earth and Environmental Series – Vol. 47. Springer, 2005: 221-237 X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X BRYOZOA Membraniporidae X X X X X X X X X X 228 Invasive Native No. of species 20 15 10 5 0 HAL INT COS COH STR LAG DEL Fig. 2. Changes in number of invasive and native suspension-feeding species along the southeastern Baltic environmental gradient (HAL-DEL, see Fig. 1). the halocline zone the suspension-feeding organisms were represented by two native species only: M. balthica and P. elegans, both being facultative suspension-feeders. Due to prevalence of the freshwater suspension-feeders LAG and DEL habitats clearly differed in species composition from the rest of the studied sites, where only marine organisms occurred (Fig. 3). The presence of marine suspension-feeders in the Klaipeda Strait determined the affinity of this habitat to the COS, COH and INT areas. Finally, the halocline zone showed clear dissimilarity due to absence of the most of suspension-feeders common in the upper marine benthic areas. Biomass Within the Lagoon, the biomass of suspension-feeders showed a clear decline trend from the delta area (1037±353 and 139±48 g/m2, invasive and native species, respectively) towards the strait (7.4±4.2 and 2.7±0.9 g/m2) (Fig. 4). The invasive species dominated, composing from 73 (in the strait) to 88% (delta) of total suspension-feeder biomass. The zebra mussel D. polymorpha was the biomass dominant species in the Lagoon (LAG and DEL areas), while the native unionids were subdominants. In the Klaipeda Strait, the biomass of the suspension-feeders was low; besides the invasive species Olenin, S. Daunys, D., 2005. Invaders in suspension-feeder systems:variations along the regional environmental gradient and similarities between large basins. In: Dame, R. and Olenin, S. (ed-s). The Comparative Roles of Suspension-Feeders in Ecosystems. NATO Science Series. Earth and Environmental Series – Vol. 47. Springer, 2005: 221-237 229 (B. improvisus and M. arenaria) two native suspension-feeders (M. edulis trossulus and M. balthica) were dominant on sites. All four species are of marine origin, having no stable populations in the strait. In contrast, their biomass in the marine areas was higher by one-two orders of magnitude. Within the marine suspension-feeder systems, the highest biomass (925 and 97 g/m2, native and invasive species, respectively) was characteristic for the coastal hard bottoms, dominated mostly by the blue mussel M. edulis trossulus with the barnacle B. improvisus as the subdominant. Fig. 3. The MDS plot based on suspension-feeding species composition in the study sites along the southeastern Baltic environmental gradient (HAL-DEL, see Fig. 1). The Baltic tellin, M. balthica, a facultative suspension-feeder, was the most important biomass dominant species (up to 95% of total) throughout all soft bottom habitats, from the coast down to the halocline area. The invasive soft clam M. arenaria, an obligatory suspension-feeder, was the subdominant in the COS area; however it did not occur in the deeper (INT, HAL) habitats. Another obligatory suspension-feeder dwelling in the soft bottoms, the Lagoon cockle C. lamarcki also was found only in the coastal areas. SUSPENSION-FEEDERS AND OTHER TROPHIC TYPES OF INVASIVE BENTHIC MACROFAUNA The total number of invasive benthic invertebrate species presently known from the Caspian, Black, Baltic and North Seas is 94. Their feeding types are as diverse as that of native macrofauna, including suspension and deposit feeders, herbivores, omnivores and predators. The invasive suspension-feeding macrofauna comprised 64 species: 41 obligatory and 23 facultative suspension-feeders (Table 2, Fig. 5). Olenin, S. Daunys, D., 2005. Invaders in suspension-feeder systems:variations along the regional environmental gradient and similarities between large basins. In: Dame, R. and Olenin, S. (ed-s). The Comparative Roles of Suspension-Feeders in Ecosystems. NATO Science Series. Earth and Environmental Series – Vol. 47. Springer, 2005: 221-237 230 Invasive Native 1000 100 10 Biomass, g/m2 10000 1 HAL INT COS COH STR LAG DEL Fig. 4. Changes in biomass of invasive and native suspension-feeding species along the southeastern Baltic environmental gradient (HAL-DEL, see Fig. 1). Table 2. Species richness in major taxonomic groups of invasive obligatory (O) and facultative (F) suspension-feeders in the Caspian, Black, Baltic and North Seas*. Caspian Taxon Anthozoa Hydrozoa Polychaeta Crustacea Gastropoda Bivalvia Ectoprocta Entoprocta Tunicata TOTAL O Black F O 3 1 2 2 1 1 1 2 Baltic F 3 2 2 2 O North F O 4 4 3 4 1 3 3 5 4 1 1 1 1 6 1 2 5 2 O 5 1 1 1 1 1 9 Total** F 4 12 6 16 1 9 23 8 4 12 5 4 1 8 4 2 1 41 F 11 6 2 4 23 *Based on: Leppäkoski and Olenin 2000b; Reise et al. 2002; Gomoiu et al. 2002; Aladin et al. 2002; Baltic Sea Alien Species Database 2003. ** Species common for two or more regions were counted once. Olenin, S. Daunys, D., 2005. Invaders in suspension-feeder systems:variations along the regional environmental gradient and similarities between large basins. In: Dame, R. and Olenin, S. (ed-s). The Comparative Roles of Suspension-Feeders in Ecosystems. NATO Science Series. Earth and Environmental Series – Vol. 47. Springer, 2005: 221-237 231 The most diverse groups among the invasive suspension-feeders were cnidarians (both anthozoans and hydroids, together comprising 16 species) and polychaetes (16 species), followed by bivalves (12 species) and crustaceans (10 species). In the later group, all obligatory suspension-feeders were represented by barnacles only (Balanus amphitrite, B. improvisus, B. eburneus and Elminius modestus). Seventeen invasive suspension-feeder species were common to at least two of the studied regions; four species (the barnacle Balanus eburneus, the mud snail Potamopyrgus antipodarum, bivalves Crassostrea gigas and M. arenaria) were found in three seas and one species (B. improvisus) occupied all four regions. The total number of invasive suspension-feeders was the highest in the North Sea (31 species), 17 of them did not occur in the other Fig. 5. The share of obligatory (OSF) and facultative (FSF) suspension-feeder species among other trophic types of invasive benthic invertebrates in various European Seas (n = total number of species). Other feeding types included predation, deposit feeding and grazing on macrophytes. three regions. The number of such “unique” species in the Black and in the Baltic Sea was the same (11), while there were fewer (8) in the Caspian Sea. Although the share of suspension-feeders varied slightly from 61% in the Baltic to 72% in the North Sea, the general rule was that this feeding type Olenin, S. Daunys, D., 2005. Invaders in suspension-feeder systems:variations along the regional environmental gradient and similarities between large basins. In: Dame, R. and Olenin, S. (ed-s). The Comparative Roles of Suspension-Feeders in Ecosystems. NATO Science Series. Earth and Environmental Series – Vol. 47. Springer, 2005: 221-237 232 was the most common among the invasive bottom macrofauna species (Fig. 5). DISCUSSION Native and Invasive Suspension-feeders: Similar and Dissimilar Distribution Patterns Along the Environmental Gradients Many works on trophic distribution along environmental gradients have shown that the diversity and biomass of the suspension-feeding macrofauna are the highest in coastal areas with active hydrodynamics, and both parameters gradually decline with increasing depth (e.g. Kuznetzov 1980; Dame 1996; Boaventura et al 1999 and references therein). In our study area, this model of suspension-feeder distribution along the depth gradient was true for both native and invasive species (Fig. 2 and 4, Table 2). For instance, the most indicative group, the obligatory suspension-feeders (either native or invasive) reached the highest biomass only in the Lagoon and coastal habitats, while in the intermediate depth zone they were insignificant and absent in the halocline area. In contrast to the depth/hydrodynamics related distribution there was no common pattern in native and invasive suspension-feeder systems in relation to the salinity gradient. The native species richness is essentially higher in the nearly lacustrine conditions of the Curonian Lagoon (DEL and LAG sites) than in the mesohaline environment of marine habitats. This result fits well into the classical Remane (1934) curve showing that within the gradient from the fresh to fully saline marine waters the minimum in species number corresponds to the salinity range of 5-8 PSU. In our case, this matches the salinity in COS, COH and INT habitats. Despite the higher salinity in the HAL habitat, the number of native suspension-feeder species was the lowest in this deeper zone due to depleted oxygen and weak hydrodynamic activity. Bonsdorff and Pearson (1999) also showed the overall gradual decrease in all functional groups of benthic macrofauna, including suspension-feeding species, from the fully marine Baltic approaches to its inner brackish water parts. Distribution of the invasive suspension-feeder species, nevertheless, did not follow the same pattern. Their highest number was found in Klaipeda Strait, i.e. where the salinity regime is most variable. However, here these species did not form stable populations being dependant on larvae transport either from the Sea or from the Lagoon (Daunys 2001). The number of invasive species in the remaining habitats, except the halocline zone, was nearly the same: 3 - 4 species (Fig. 6). Olenin, S. Daunys, D., 2005. Invaders in suspension-feeder systems:variations along the regional environmental gradient and similarities between large basins. In: Dame, R. and Olenin, S. (ed-s). The Comparative Roles of Suspension-Feeders in Ecosystems. NATO Science Series. Earth and Environmental Series – Vol. 47. Springer, 2005: 221-237 233 Fig. 6. Number of invasive suspension-feeder species plotted against the number of native suspension-feeder species in the southeastern Baltic benthic habitats (HAL-DEL, see Fig. 1) This “breach” of the Remane’s rule by the invasive suspensionfeeders may be explained by their ecological plasticity, which is generally characteristic for invaders (e.g. Carlton 1996, Ruiz and Hewitt 2002). In the Baltic Sea, most of the alien benthic invertebrates, including the suspensionfeeders, originate from the brackish waters of the North American east coast, the Ponto-Caspian region and the South-East Asia (Leppäkoski et al. 2002b). Capability to cope with low salinity conditions is the common trait of these mostly estuarine species, and this probably explains why their distribution within the salinity range 0 – 8 PSU did not follow the native species pattern. Studies on invasive suspension-feeder systems across a broader salinity interval may determine if these generalizations are also true for other brackish water seas. Invasive Versus Native: Occupation of Empty Niches and Species Displacement We noticed a clear shift in the biomass dominance from the invasive species in the Curonian Lagoon (D. polymorpha) to the native suspensionfeeders in the Baltic Sea (M. edulis trossulus, M. balthica). D. polymorpha is known to inhabit fresh waters, where the niche of sessile byssate suspensionfeeders is usually unoccupied (Orlova 2002; Burlakova et al. 2004). In the oligohaline stable salinity coastal waters of the north-eastern Baltic, the zebra mussel may co-occur with the native M. edulis trossulus on sites, though it does not displace the later (Kotta and Møhlenberg 2002). Olenin, S. Daunys, D., 2005. Invaders in suspension-feeder systems:variations along the regional environmental gradient and similarities between large basins. In: Dame, R. and Olenin, S. (ed-s). The Comparative Roles of Suspension-Feeders in Ecosystems. NATO Science Series. Earth and Environmental Series – Vol. 47. Springer, 2005: 221-237 234 Another invasive suspension-feeding species within our study area, which was able to fill an empty niche, was the barnacle B. improvisus. This is the only sessile benthic animal which is able to withstand harsh conditions of constant wave action and abrasive effect of sand in the uppermost part of the coastal slope (Olenin and Daunys, unpublished). The barnacles form seasonal settlements on large boulders (at the depth < 1.5 m), which usually disappear in winter time. The third example is the hydroid Cordylophora caspia, which produces dense bush-like colonies on firm substrates both in the Lagoon and in the Sea. In spite of these three examples, our results do not support theories predicting that species-rich communities should be more resistant to invasions because of a more complete utilization of resources (see Ruiz and Hewitt 2002 for a comprehensive review). The number of invasive suspensionfeeders was the same in the comparatively species-rich communities of the Curonian Lagoon and in the species-poorer Baltic marine communities. The significance of species invasion for functional changes might be much higher in species poor communities than in species rich ones. Variety of species of the same functional guild within a system (functional redundancy) may be a measure of the overall system’s ability to perform a given function. Extinction of a species in the Baltic Sea may cause the loss of entire process (e.g. biodeposition), while the same event, e.g., in the North Sea would mean only a minor shift in the species composition and overall role of the functional group. The invasion of new species in such species poor systems as the Baltic Sea in many cases means the increase in functional redundancy and denser “packing” of available niches. In the Baltic Sea, invasions have caused serious structural and functional changes, especially in its coastal Lagoons and inlets (Olenin and Leppäkoski 1999), however they have not yet triggered extinction of native species. INVASIVE SUSPENSION-FEEDERS AND FUNCTIONAL HOMOGENIZATION OF AQUATIC BIOTA Asmus and Asmus (2004) showed that the share of suspensionfeeding species in total species number is much lower than that of non suspension-feeders on different scales from global to local ones, suggesting a minor influence of suspension-feeding type to total diversity of systems. Our study, however, showed an opposite result in regard to the invasive benthic macrofauna. In all major European brackish water bodies (Baltic, Black and Caspian seas) as well as in the fully saline North Sea, suspension-feeding was the prevalent trophic type among benthic invertebrate invaders. It is unclear, how the species ability to filter-feed may promote their invasion success. Possibly, suspension-feeding as the most optimal foraging Olenin, S. Daunys, D., 2005. Invaders in suspension-feeder systems:variations along the regional environmental gradient and similarities between large basins. In: Dame, R. and Olenin, S. (ed-s). The Comparative Roles of Suspension-Feeders in Ecosystems. NATO Science Series. Earth and Environmental Series – Vol. 47. Springer, 2005: 221-237 235 strategy (Gili and Coma, 1998) adds to other common traits of invaders: ecological plasticity, profitable reproductive strategy, ability to use different substrates, etc (Ruiz and Hewitt 2002 and references therein). Increased pelagic food through eutrophication may also promote the relative success of suspension-feeder invaders, especially in the coastal areas, which are mostly exposed to new introductions. Further studies on these observations may help to better identify potential successful benthic invaders. Olden et al. (2004) consider ecological and evolutionary consequences of biotic homogenization caused by invasions, including the functional ones. Our findings indicate that the suspension-feeders are the prevalent group among invasive benthic invertebrates and assume the vector of that functional homogenization. If the rate and the scope of invasions remain at the recent high level then the role of suspension-feeding as a trophic type will grow in the future. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS This study was supported by the EU FW6 project EVK3-CT-200100065 CHARM “Characterization of the Baltic Sea Ecosystem: Dynamics and Function of Coastal Types” and EU FW6 IP 506675 ALARM “Assessing Large-scale environmental risks with tested methods”. We thank Erkki Leppäkoski (Åbo Akademi University, Turku, Finland) and an anonymous reviewer for their comments and suggestions to improve this manuscript. 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