Limnoperna Fortunei 2015
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-13494-9_13
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Trophic Relationships of Limnoperna Fortunei with Adult Fishes

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Cited by 26 publications
(19 citation statements)
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“…As hypothesized in this study, and previously discussed by others (e.g. Cataldo, ; Sylvester, Boltovskoy, & Cataldo, ), our investigation supports that fish species that are better adapted to the consumption of hard prey represent an important top‐down control of mussel populations. In line with this, our exclusion experiment shows a marked difference in mussel density between open and closed modules, supporting the role of fish as mitigators of this invasion.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 92%
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“…As hypothesized in this study, and previously discussed by others (e.g. Cataldo, ; Sylvester, Boltovskoy, & Cataldo, ), our investigation supports that fish species that are better adapted to the consumption of hard prey represent an important top‐down control of mussel populations. In line with this, our exclusion experiment shows a marked difference in mussel density between open and closed modules, supporting the role of fish as mitigators of this invasion.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 92%
“…More than one‐third of the native fish species in the assemblage of the lower Uruguay River predated on L. fortunei. Most of these species had been previously reported as L. fortunei consumers in different areas of the Río de La Plata Basin, such as the Paraná River channel and reservoirs, and the inner Río de La Plata Estuary (Boltovskoy et al, ; Cataldo, ; Catanhêde, Hahn, Gubiani, & Fugi, ; Penchaszadeh et al, ). These studies were conducted in different watersheds, and thus bear different fish assemblages.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 95%
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“…Enhancement of toxic cyanobacterial blooms in South America by the freshwater invasive bivalve Limnoperna fortunei (Cataldo et al, ) is clearly a negative impact which, among many others, is often responsible for massive fish mortalities. However, since its introduction around 1990, the planktonic larvae of this invasive mussel are widely consumed by indigenous fish larvae, for which they represent an abundant, easily available and more nutritious prey than native zooplankton (Paolucci, Thuesen, Cataldo, & Boltovskoy, ), and adult mussels are grazed upon by at least 50 South American fish species (Cataldo, ), which eliminate up to over 90% of the mussel's yearly production (Duchini, Boltovskoy, & Sylvester, ; Sylvester, Boltovskoy, & Cataldo, ). The increase in Argentine freshwater fish landings from ~10,000 metric tons in 1950–1990, to ~20,000 tons after 1995, has been tentatively attributed to the presence of this new trophic resource (Boltovskoy, Correa, Cataldo, & Sylvester, ).…”
Section: Dissent Debate and Denialismmentioning
confidence: 99%