Competitive interactions for food resources between invasive Ponto-Caspian gobies and their native competitors in the context of global warming

Climate warming can modify the process of biological invasions by affecting the outcomes of competition between alien species and their native counterparts in invaded environments. Inland freshwaters are particularly vulnerable to the intensification of such phenomena due to the accumulation of inva...

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Main Authors: Piotr Kłosiński, Jarosław Kobak, Tomasz Kakareko
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Pensoft Publishers 2025-02-01
Series:NeoBiota
Online Access:https://neobiota.pensoft.net/article/134566/download/pdf/
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author Piotr Kłosiński
Jarosław Kobak
Tomasz Kakareko
author_facet Piotr Kłosiński
Jarosław Kobak
Tomasz Kakareko
author_sort Piotr Kłosiński
collection DOAJ
description Climate warming can modify the process of biological invasions by affecting the outcomes of competition between alien species and their native counterparts in invaded environments. Inland freshwaters are particularly vulnerable to the intensification of such phenomena due to the accumulation of invaders, including thermophilic species that may benefit from warming. We intended to check whether an elevated summer temperature (25 vs. 17 °C) affects the abilities of the Ponto-Caspian gobies to compete for food. These fish are considered temperature-tolerant, highly invasive freshwater fish in Europe. In laboratory experiments, we tested single- and two-species pairs of juvenile specimens of two goby species and their native counterparts from the same ecological guild (the racer goby Babka gymnotrachelus versus European bullhead Cottus gobio, and monkey goby Neogobius fluviatilis versus native gudgeon Gobio gobio). The fish competed for food (live chironomidae larvae provided at rates below satiation) for 1 hour at night. We analysed behaviours associated with direct interactions (aggression acts) and foraging activity (time to enter the feeder and the time spent in the feeder). We found that although the gobies did not show higher aggression than the natives, they more actively accessed food compared to the latter, irrespective of temperature. Our results suggest that, in the wild, the invasive fish have a competitive advantage over the native ones due to better resource allocation (gaining food without incurring the costs of aggression) and will maintain this advantage as water warming continues.
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institution Kabale University
issn 1314-2488
language English
publishDate 2025-02-01
publisher Pensoft Publishers
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series NeoBiota
spelling doaj-art-9ab67791697f4861bec0de9c954dc8412025-02-05T08:30:54ZengPensoft PublishersNeoBiota1314-24882025-02-01979111910.3897/neobiota.97.134566134566Competitive interactions for food resources between invasive Ponto-Caspian gobies and their native competitors in the context of global warmingPiotr Kłosiński0Jarosław Kobak1Tomasz Kakareko2Nicolaus Copernicus UniversityNicolaus Copernicus UniversityNicolaus Copernicus UniversityClimate warming can modify the process of biological invasions by affecting the outcomes of competition between alien species and their native counterparts in invaded environments. Inland freshwaters are particularly vulnerable to the intensification of such phenomena due to the accumulation of invaders, including thermophilic species that may benefit from warming. We intended to check whether an elevated summer temperature (25 vs. 17 °C) affects the abilities of the Ponto-Caspian gobies to compete for food. These fish are considered temperature-tolerant, highly invasive freshwater fish in Europe. In laboratory experiments, we tested single- and two-species pairs of juvenile specimens of two goby species and their native counterparts from the same ecological guild (the racer goby Babka gymnotrachelus versus European bullhead Cottus gobio, and monkey goby Neogobius fluviatilis versus native gudgeon Gobio gobio). The fish competed for food (live chironomidae larvae provided at rates below satiation) for 1 hour at night. We analysed behaviours associated with direct interactions (aggression acts) and foraging activity (time to enter the feeder and the time spent in the feeder). We found that although the gobies did not show higher aggression than the natives, they more actively accessed food compared to the latter, irrespective of temperature. Our results suggest that, in the wild, the invasive fish have a competitive advantage over the native ones due to better resource allocation (gaining food without incurring the costs of aggression) and will maintain this advantage as water warming continues.https://neobiota.pensoft.net/article/134566/download/pdf/
spellingShingle Piotr Kłosiński
Jarosław Kobak
Tomasz Kakareko
Competitive interactions for food resources between invasive Ponto-Caspian gobies and their native competitors in the context of global warming
NeoBiota
title Competitive interactions for food resources between invasive Ponto-Caspian gobies and their native competitors in the context of global warming
title_full Competitive interactions for food resources between invasive Ponto-Caspian gobies and their native competitors in the context of global warming
title_fullStr Competitive interactions for food resources between invasive Ponto-Caspian gobies and their native competitors in the context of global warming
title_full_unstemmed Competitive interactions for food resources between invasive Ponto-Caspian gobies and their native competitors in the context of global warming
title_short Competitive interactions for food resources between invasive Ponto-Caspian gobies and their native competitors in the context of global warming
title_sort competitive interactions for food resources between invasive ponto caspian gobies and their native competitors in the context of global warming
url https://neobiota.pensoft.net/article/134566/download/pdf/
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AT jarosławkobak competitiveinteractionsforfoodresourcesbetweeninvasivepontocaspiangobiesandtheirnativecompetitorsinthecontextofglobalwarming
AT tomaszkakareko competitiveinteractionsforfoodresourcesbetweeninvasivepontocaspiangobiesandtheirnativecompetitorsinthecontextofglobalwarming