Salinity tolerance of Round Goby: Informing invasion potential in North American coastal watersheds.

Since being introduced into the Laurentian Great Lakes in the 1990s, round goby (Neogobius melanostomus) has spread rapidly, reaching the Hudson River Estuary, NY in 2021. To address the expansion potential into saline environments from this North American coastal invasion front, we experimentally a...

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Main Authors: Kelsey Alvarez Del Castillo, Suresh A Sethi, Eugene Won, John Maniscalco, Richard Pendleton, Eliza Ryan, Lars G Rudstam
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2025-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0316327
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author Kelsey Alvarez Del Castillo
Suresh A Sethi
Eugene Won
John Maniscalco
Richard Pendleton
Eliza Ryan
Lars G Rudstam
author_facet Kelsey Alvarez Del Castillo
Suresh A Sethi
Eugene Won
John Maniscalco
Richard Pendleton
Eliza Ryan
Lars G Rudstam
author_sort Kelsey Alvarez Del Castillo
collection DOAJ
description Since being introduced into the Laurentian Great Lakes in the 1990s, round goby (Neogobius melanostomus) has spread rapidly, reaching the Hudson River Estuary, NY in 2021. To address the expansion potential into saline environments from this North American coastal invasion front, we experimentally assessed the salinity tolerance of adult round gobies. Water temperatures vary widely in temperate aquatic ecosystems, and our study is the first to investigate the effect of temperature on the salinity tolerance of round goby, conducting tolerance trials at three temperatures: a preferred temperature of 20°C, 26°C reflective of summer conditions, and 5°C reflective of winter conditions. Adult round gobies were subjected to weekly salinity increases of 3 parts per thousand (ppt), concluding at 33ppt. Study specimens were monitored for stress cues (behavior changes and color changes), and mortality. We found significant salinity tolerance differences dependent on water temperature, with the highest tolerance at 5°C and the lowest tolerance at 26°C. By 30ppt, survival was 87% at 5°C and only 7% at 26°C. Based on mortality results, round goby expansion may occur year-round into brackish portions (<21ppt) of the Hudson River Estuary as far south as the Harlem River. This would open access to portions of Long Island Sound, potentially rendering other coastal watersheds to be at risk of invasion. However, temperature-dependent salinity tolerance findings suggest round goby expansion potential into high salinity habitats may be seasonally dependent, with expansion opportunities occurring in colder months and expansion barriers occurring in warmer months. To assess longer term survival and body condition, another experiment maintained round gobies at four sustained salinities (≤ 21ppt) for ten weeks at 20°C. Growth and hepatosomatic index at 21ppt were significantly lower (p<0.001) than at 1, 9, and 15ppt, indicating sustained exposure to higher salinities may affect energy stores, potentially limiting establishment potential.
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spelling doaj-art-364bf440116741d78b0bccf238fb4eca2025-08-20T02:28:55ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032025-01-01204e031632710.1371/journal.pone.0316327Salinity tolerance of Round Goby: Informing invasion potential in North American coastal watersheds.Kelsey Alvarez Del CastilloSuresh A SethiEugene WonJohn ManiscalcoRichard PendletonEliza RyanLars G RudstamSince being introduced into the Laurentian Great Lakes in the 1990s, round goby (Neogobius melanostomus) has spread rapidly, reaching the Hudson River Estuary, NY in 2021. To address the expansion potential into saline environments from this North American coastal invasion front, we experimentally assessed the salinity tolerance of adult round gobies. Water temperatures vary widely in temperate aquatic ecosystems, and our study is the first to investigate the effect of temperature on the salinity tolerance of round goby, conducting tolerance trials at three temperatures: a preferred temperature of 20°C, 26°C reflective of summer conditions, and 5°C reflective of winter conditions. Adult round gobies were subjected to weekly salinity increases of 3 parts per thousand (ppt), concluding at 33ppt. Study specimens were monitored for stress cues (behavior changes and color changes), and mortality. We found significant salinity tolerance differences dependent on water temperature, with the highest tolerance at 5°C and the lowest tolerance at 26°C. By 30ppt, survival was 87% at 5°C and only 7% at 26°C. Based on mortality results, round goby expansion may occur year-round into brackish portions (<21ppt) of the Hudson River Estuary as far south as the Harlem River. This would open access to portions of Long Island Sound, potentially rendering other coastal watersheds to be at risk of invasion. However, temperature-dependent salinity tolerance findings suggest round goby expansion potential into high salinity habitats may be seasonally dependent, with expansion opportunities occurring in colder months and expansion barriers occurring in warmer months. To assess longer term survival and body condition, another experiment maintained round gobies at four sustained salinities (≤ 21ppt) for ten weeks at 20°C. Growth and hepatosomatic index at 21ppt were significantly lower (p<0.001) than at 1, 9, and 15ppt, indicating sustained exposure to higher salinities may affect energy stores, potentially limiting establishment potential.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0316327
spellingShingle Kelsey Alvarez Del Castillo
Suresh A Sethi
Eugene Won
John Maniscalco
Richard Pendleton
Eliza Ryan
Lars G Rudstam
Salinity tolerance of Round Goby: Informing invasion potential in North American coastal watersheds.
PLoS ONE
title Salinity tolerance of Round Goby: Informing invasion potential in North American coastal watersheds.
title_full Salinity tolerance of Round Goby: Informing invasion potential in North American coastal watersheds.
title_fullStr Salinity tolerance of Round Goby: Informing invasion potential in North American coastal watersheds.
title_full_unstemmed Salinity tolerance of Round Goby: Informing invasion potential in North American coastal watersheds.
title_short Salinity tolerance of Round Goby: Informing invasion potential in North American coastal watersheds.
title_sort salinity tolerance of round goby informing invasion potential in north american coastal watersheds
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0316327
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