2021
DOI: 10.1101/2021.10.29.466526
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Serial invasions can disrupt the time course of ecosystem recovery

Abstract: The impacts of species invasions can subside or amplify over time as ecosystems “adapt” or additional invaders arrive. These long-term changes provide important insights into ecosystem dynamics. Yet studies of long-term dynamics are rare and often confound species impacts with coincident environmental change. We synthesize many-decade time-series across ecosystems to resolve shared changes in seven key features following invasion by quagga and zebra mussels, two widespread congeners that re-engineer and increa… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…However, a tenfold decline in zebra mussel biomass occurred 30 years after mussel numbers peaked, most likely driven by an increase in nutrient loads and oxygen depletion caused by the fish hatchery launched in the lake in 1989 (Mitrakhovich et al, 2008 ). This decline was associated with a relapse of almost all environmental parameters to pre-invasion values, returning the lake to a turbid water state (Mitrakhovich et al, 2008 ; Karatayev et al, 2021c ).…”
Section: Reverse Ecosystem Changes Due To Mussel Population Crashesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, a tenfold decline in zebra mussel biomass occurred 30 years after mussel numbers peaked, most likely driven by an increase in nutrient loads and oxygen depletion caused by the fish hatchery launched in the lake in 1989 (Mitrakhovich et al, 2008 ). This decline was associated with a relapse of almost all environmental parameters to pre-invasion values, returning the lake to a turbid water state (Mitrakhovich et al, 2008 ; Karatayev et al, 2021c ).…”
Section: Reverse Ecosystem Changes Due To Mussel Population Crashesmentioning
confidence: 99%