“…In addition, eutrophicationdriven improvements in food availability have been linked to greater fecundity as well as greater juvenile survival and growth rates (Candolin et al, 2014;Candolin, 2019;Saarinen and Candolin, 2020). However, the negative impact of decadal eutrophication on habitat-forming macrophytes, such as bladderwrack (Fucus vesiculosus) (Bergström et al, 2013), may indirectly increase stickleback mortality rates, as they normally provide sticklebacks with refuge from predators (Gagnon et al, 2017;Donadi et al, 2020). In addition, the increased turbidity may have resulted in a reduced ability to detect both predators and prey (Candolin, 2019).…”