Date: March 20, 2019
Source: University of Wyoming
Introduction
of nonnative lake trout in Yellowstone Lake has affected organisms from the
microscopic level in the lake to large animals in the region, according to
newly published research.
Zooplankton,
cutthroat trout, river otters, osprey, bald eagles, bears and likely elk are
among the creatures whose numbers, diet and behavior have been altered as a
result of the presence of the invasive fish, says an article that appears today
in the scientific journal Science Advances.
The
authors include Lusha Tronstad, research scientist with the Wyoming Natural
Diversity Database at the University of Wyoming; National Park Service
scientists Todd Koel, Jeffrey Arnold, Kerry Gunther, Doug Smith and Patrick
White; and John Syslo of the Montana Cooperative Fishery Research Unit at
Montana State University.
The
scientists analyzed data spanning more than four decades, from 1972-2017, and
concluded that the impact of lake trout in Yellowstone Lake -- in particular,
the decline of native cutthroat trout -- has cascaded across the lake, its
tributaries and the surrounding ecosystem.
"Our
study illustrates the potential impact of a single, invasive predatory species
on otherwise pristine ecosystems," the researchers wrote, providing
further support for Yellowstone National Park's efforts to suppress the lake
trout population in Yellowstone Lake.
Monitoring
over the past three decades has shown a dramatic drop in the numbers of native
cutthroat trout that inhabit Yellowstone Lake and spawn in its tributaries,
largely as a result of the illegal introduction in the 1980s of lake trout --
which prey on cutthroats and spawn at depths inaccessible to bears, birds and
other animals.
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