The estuaries of coastal Louisiana overwinter a continentally significant proportion of Lesser Scaup (Aythya affinis; colloquially, "bluebills"), a migratory bird species of conservation concern since population declines began in the 1980s. Thirty-eight years of aerial waterfowl surveys of Lake Pontchartrainan oligohaline estuarine lagoon in southeast Louisiana-show that scaup abundance fluctuates between 0 and 1,194,907 birds, though the mechanisms driving this variation are unknown. Previous studies have shown that scaup feed primarily on mollusks, and so changes in the benthic prey community have the potential to strongly influence scaup dynamics on the Lake. Benthic communities are in turn shaped by both natural and anthropogenic disturbances (e.g., hurricanes and spillway openings), potentially creating a lagged bottom-up trophic cascade that ultimately affects scaup abundance. Using 22 yr of paired benthic invertebrate and aerial waterfowl survey data, we found scaup populations increased with the abundance of medium-sized Rangia clams (Rangia cuneata) and Dwarf Surf Clams (Mulinia lateralis). Those prey species declined in years when the Lake was hit by a hurricane, but medium-sized Rangia rebounded strongly the year after, likely because storm-surge salinity induces spawning. Using long-term aerial survey data for scaup, we indeed found strong declines on the Lake in years when a hurricane made landfall, but scaup abundance increased the following year, presumably responding to large numbers of medium-sized Rangia. Our three-part analysis makes a strong case for a hurricane-driven bottom-up trophic cascade that affects scaup populations on Lake Pontchartrain. This study adds to a growing literature demonstrating not only that estuaries are tidally and seasonally dynamic, but that punctuated disturbance events can be important for maintaining ecosystem function.
The lesser scaup Aythya affinis has been a species of conservation concern since continental breeding populations began declining in the 1980s. The causes of this decline are likely multifaceted, but cross-seasonal effects are believed to play a prominent role: females unable to acquire sufficient nutrient reserves during winter and spring migration have poor survival and breeding success. Understanding scaup diet composition and prey selection can help managers not only diagnose mechanisms underlying wintering scaup distributions, but may also help direct management actions to increase forage availability and quality. We evaluated the diet of 60 scaup collected from a major wintering site in Louisiana, Lake Pontchartrain. Scaup consumed almost entirely mollusks, especially targeting medium-sized (6–16 mm) common rangia clams Rangia cuneata, which were strongly selected relative to their availability. Eighty-two percent of scaup consumed dark false mussels Mytilopsis leucophaeata and 57% consumed dwarf surf clams Mulinia lateralis; both foods were selected by scaup, but were uncommon in benthic samples. On the other hand, small snails Texadina sphinctostoma, Probythinella protera were common in dredge samples but were either avoided or consumed in proportion to their availability. We conclude that medium-sized common rangia clams and dark false mussels are the most consumed foods for scaup wintering on Lake Pontchartrain, and hypothesize that annual variation in prey populations may be an important proximate driver of scaup abundance.
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