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Climate warming restructures an aquatic food web over 28 years.

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

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Abstract

Climate warming can restructure lake food webs if trophic levels differ in their thermal responses, but evidence for these changes and their underlying mechanisms remain scarce in nature. Here we document how warming lake temperatures by up to 2°C, rather than changes in trophic state or fishing effort, have restructured the pelagic food web of a large European lake (Lake Maggiore, Italy). Our approach exploited abundance and biomass data collected weekly to yearly across five trophic levels from 1981 to 2008. Temperature generally had stronger effects on taxa than changes in fish predation or trophic state mediated through primary productivity. Consequently, we found that, as the lake warmed, the food web shifted in numerical abundance towards predators occupying middle trophic positions. Of these taxa, the spiny water flea (Bythotrephes longimanus) most prospered. Bythotrephes strongly limited abundances of the keystone grazer Daphnia, strengthening top-down structuring of the food web. Warmer temperatures partly restructured the food web by advancing peak Bythotrephes densities by approximately 60 days and extending periods of positive population growth by three times. Nonetheless, our results suggested that advances in the timing and size of peak Bythotrephes densities could not outpace changes in the timing and size of peak densities in their Daphnia prey. Our results provide rare evidence from nature as to how long-term warming can favour higher trophic levels, with the potential to strengthen top-down control of food webs.

Description

Journal Title

Glob Chang Biol

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1354-1013
1365-2486

Volume Title

26

Publisher

Wiley

Rights and licensing

Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as All rights reserved
Sponsorship
Funding for A.J.T. to visit the CNR Water Research Institute and carry out this study came from the European Commission through the Long Term Ecological Research site ‘‘Southern Alpine lakes” (Horizon 2020 Grant no. 654359).