Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
Articles 1 - 1 of 1
Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences
Effects Of Experimentally Added Salmon Subsidies On Resident Fishes Via Direct And Indirect Pathways, Scott F. Collins, Colden V. Baxter, Amy Marcarelli, Mark S. Wipfli
Effects Of Experimentally Added Salmon Subsidies On Resident Fishes Via Direct And Indirect Pathways, Scott F. Collins, Colden V. Baxter, Amy Marcarelli, Mark S. Wipfli
Amy Marcarelli
Artificial additions of nutrients of differing forms such as salmon carcasses and analog pellets (i.e. pasteurized fishmeal) have been proposed as a means of stimulating aquatic productivity and enhancing populations of anadromous and resident fishes. Nutrient mitigation to enhance fish production in stream ecosystems assumes that the central pathway by which effects occur is bottom-up, through aquatic primary and secondary production, with little consideration of reciprocal aquatic-terrestrial pathways. The net outcome (i.e. bottom-up vs. top-down) of adding salmon-derived materials to streams depend on whether or not these subsidies indirectly intensify predation on in situ prey via increases in a shared …