“…However, the first stickleback population expansion during the eutrophication period in Constance coincides with population size increase in whitefish (Numann, 1972), so the relationship between whitefish and stickleback abundances is either mediated by some other factors in the environment, or it is not causal. It has been proposed that either competition for pelagic zooplankton resources such as Daphnia -that have declined in abundance with the re-oligotrophication of Lake Constance (Straile and Geller, 1998;Stich and Brinker, 2010;Rösch et al, 2017) -or direct predation on whitefish eggs and larvae (Roch et al, 2018;Ros et al, 2019) are responsible for this reduction in yield. Predation by sticklebacks on eggs and juveniles of their own species occurs frequently (Whoriskey and FitzGerald, 1985;Hyatt and Ringler, 1989;Smith and Reay, 1991;Foster and Bell, 1994;Manica, 2002;Mehlis et al, 2010) along with predation on larvae of other fish species (Hynes, 1950;Manzer, 1976;Delbeek and Williams, 1988;Kean-Howie et al, 1988;Gotceitas and Brown, 1993;Nilsson, 2006;Kotterba et al, 2014;Byström et al, 2015), while previous studies on stickleback populations in the Baltic Sea have suggested that intraguild predation on eggs and juvenile fish is responsible for the observed declines in perch (Perca fluviatilis, Linnaeus, 1758) and pike (Esox lucius, Linnaeus, 1758) recruitment (Nilsson, 2006;Bergström et al, 2015;Byström et al, 2015;Nilsson et al, 2019;Eklöf et al, 2020).…”