2016
DOI: 10.1111/jfb.13014
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Invasion status of the common carp Cyprinus carpio in inland waters of Argentina

Abstract: This study documents the presence of Cyprinus carpio in 119 natural environments and 49 artificial habitats in Argentina, showing an exponential increment of invaded locations over time since it was introduced in the nineteenth century. Geographic expansion patterns revealed that since its initial introduction, species records demonstrate an increment in the central portion of the country only after 1970 and subsequent expansion after 1990 to the north, west and south. Using an environmental similarity index i… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(20 citation statements)
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“…In the southern hemisphere, the C . carpio population(s) reported from Lakes Crescent and Sorell and included in the present study may well be representative of the highest latitude (42° 18′ S) at which the species is encountered, with areas in South America above that latitude being currently flagged only as liable to further potential invasiveness (Zambrano et al ., ; Crichigno et al ., ; Maiztegui et al ., ).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 76%
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“…In the southern hemisphere, the C . carpio population(s) reported from Lakes Crescent and Sorell and included in the present study may well be representative of the highest latitude (42° 18′ S) at which the species is encountered, with areas in South America above that latitude being currently flagged only as liable to further potential invasiveness (Zambrano et al ., ; Crichigno et al ., ; Maiztegui et al ., ).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 76%
“…In the former country, however, only restricted distributions for C. carpio have so far been identified, whereas in the latter the species has not (yet) successfully established (Froese & Pauly, 2016). In the southern hemisphere, the C. carpio population(s) reported from Lakes Crescent and Sorell and included in the present study may well be representative of the highest latitude (42 ∘ 18 ′ S) at which the species is encountered, with areas in South America above that latitude being currently flagged only as liable to further potential invasiveness (Zambrano et al, 2006;Crichigno et al, 2016;Maiztegui et al, 2016).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 96%
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“…The invasive success of C. carpio is strongly related to its high tolerance to environmental stress (e.g. Edwards and Twomey 1982;Weber et al 2010;Maiztegui et al 2016); a generalist feeding strategy (Sibbing 1988;Colautti and Remes Lenicov 2001;García-Berthou 2001); fast growth, high fecundity and early sexual maturation (Panek 1987;Winker et al 2011;Vilizzi and Copp 2017). Impacts are linked primarily to their bottom grubbing feeding mechanism which mobilizes sediments, increases turbidity and enhances nutrient availability which have been shown to alter aquatic food webs on multiple trophic levels .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These include not only regions with warm and/or arid climates (e.g. Central and South America, Africa), where carp is predicted to expand further its invasive range of distribution (Zambrano et al 2006;Crichigno et al 2016;Maiztegui et al 2016), but also those areas where the species plays an important commercial role for fisheries, as in Anatolia, Turkey (Gaygusuz et al 2015) and in the Caspian Sea region (Abdullaev 2011;Amouei et al 2013;Sedaghat et al 2013). …”
Section: Directions For Future Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%