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Introduced northern pike predation on salmonids in southcentral Alaska
Authors:Adam J Sepulveda  David S Rutz  Sam S Ivey  Kristine J Dunker  Jackson A Gross
Institution:1. US Geological Survey, Northern Rocky Mountain Science Center, , Bozeman, MT, 59715 USA;2. Alaska Department of Fish & Game, Division of Sport Fish, , Palmer, AK, 99645 USA;3. Alaska Department of Fish & Game, Division of Sport Fish, , Anchorage, AK, 99518 USA
Abstract:Northern pike (Esox lucius) are opportunistic predators that can switch to alternative prey species after preferred prey have declined. This trophic adaptability allows invasive pike to have negative effects on aquatic food webs. In Southcentral Alaska, invasive pike are a substantial concern because they have spread to important spawning and rearing habitat for salmonids and are hypothesised to be responsible for recent salmonid declines. We described the relative importance of salmonids and other prey species to pike diets in the Deshka River and Alexander Creek in Southcentral Alaska. Salmonids were once abundant in both rivers, but they are now rare in Alexander Creek. In the Deshka River, we found that juvenile Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) and coho salmon (O. kisutch) dominated pike diets and that small pike consumed more of these salmonids than large pike. In Alexander Creek, pike diets reflected the distribution of spawning salmonids, which decrease with distance upstream. Although salmonids dominated pike diets in the lowest reach of the stream, Arctic lamprey (Lampetra camtschatica) and slimy sculpin (Cottus cognatus) dominated pike diets in the middle and upper reaches. In both rivers, pike density did not influence diet and pike consumed smaller prey items than predicted by their gape‐width. Our data suggest that (1) juvenile salmonids are a dominant prey item for pike, (2) small pike are the primary consumers of juvenile salmonids and (3) pike consume other native fish species when juvenile salmonids are less abundant. Implications of this trophic adaptability are that invasive pike can continue to increase while driving multiple species to low abundance.
Keywords:Alaska  diet     Esox lucius     Northern pike  prey‐specific abundance  salmon  Susitna River
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