2012
DOI: 10.1111/ddi.12001
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Invasion success and impact of an invasive fish, round goby, in Great Lakes tributaries

Abstract: Aim Environmental and biological characteristics interact in complex ways to determine ecosystem susceptibility to invasive species, and a greater understanding of their relative roles in invader spread and impact is needed. We evaluated relationships between environmental characteristics, biodiversity of indigenous species, and the abundance and ecological impact of an invasive fish, round goby (Neogobius melanostomus).Location Tributaries to Lake Michigan, WI, USA.Methods We assessed the distribution and abu… Show more

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Cited by 66 publications
(56 citation statements)
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References 89 publications
(120 reference statements)
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“…This analysis method was chosen because the significance testing best identifies species-specific shoreline type patterns, which are likely of interest to readers. However, we also evaluated the local-scale effect of shoreline type on faunal community structure as a whole using redundancy analysis (Borcard et al 1992), a multivariate approach useful for understanding patterns in community composition that has been frequently applied to fish communities (e.g., Angermeier and Winston 1999;Sharma et al 2011;Kornis et al 2013). We used redundancy analysis to determine the total amount of variation in faunal community structure explained by localscale shoreline type and to corroborate the results of the ANOVA approach (See Online Resource C for more detail).…”
Section: Local-scale Effects Of Shoreline Typementioning
confidence: 99%
“…This analysis method was chosen because the significance testing best identifies species-specific shoreline type patterns, which are likely of interest to readers. However, we also evaluated the local-scale effect of shoreline type on faunal community structure as a whole using redundancy analysis (Borcard et al 1992), a multivariate approach useful for understanding patterns in community composition that has been frequently applied to fish communities (e.g., Angermeier and Winston 1999;Sharma et al 2011;Kornis et al 2013). We used redundancy analysis to determine the total amount of variation in faunal community structure explained by localscale shoreline type and to corroborate the results of the ANOVA approach (See Online Resource C for more detail).…”
Section: Local-scale Effects Of Shoreline Typementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Further, while the consumption of gobiids by predatory fishes in general has been widely studied in North American waters (e.g. Kornis et al, 2013), it remains relatively understudied in Europe (but see Plachocki et al, 2012;Hempel et al, 2016;Mikl et al, 2017). Invasive non-native fish such as tubenose gobies have the potential to severely affect ecosystem relationships (Kornis et al, 2013) by causing changes to local food webs (Balshine et al, 2005;Copp et al, 2005;Johnson et al, 2005).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the impact of round goby abundance on logperch abundance in Hamilton Harbour, Lake Ontario remains elusive (Balshine et al 2005). No impact on logperch abundance has been found in catchments of Lake Michigan (Kornis et al 2013).…”
Section: Impacts On Native Benthic Fishmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Decision makers prioritize management efforts on those species that are expected to have the most adverse impact (Simberloff 2003). Because not all potentially harmful introductions can be simultaneously managed, decision makers have to ''maximize the trade-off between accuracy and utility'' of a management (Kornis et al 2013).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%