W-2,3-7 Comparing Climate Change and Species Invasions as Drivers of Coldwater Fish Population Extirpations

Wednesday, August 22, 2012: 9:30 AM
Meeting Room 2,3 (RiverCentre)
Sapna Sharma , Biology, Loyola University Chicago, Chicago, IL
M. Jake Vander Zanden , Center for Limnology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI
John Magnuson , University of Wisconsin-Madison, Center for Limnology, Madison, WI
John Lyons , Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources, Madison, WI
Species are influenced by multiple environmental stressors acting simultaneously.  Our objective was to compare the expected effects of climate change and invasion of non-indigenous rainbow smelt (Osmerus mordax) on cisco (Coregonus artedii) population extirpations.  We assembled a database of over 13,000 lakes in Wisconsin, USA, summarising fish occurrence, lake morphology, water chemistry, and climate.  We used A1, A2, and B1 scenarios from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) of future temperature conditions for 15 general circulation models in 2046-2065 and 2081-2100 totalling 78 projections.   Logistic regression indicated that cisco tended to occur in cooler, larger, and deeper lakes.  Depending upon the amount of warming, 25–70% of cisco populations are predicted to be extirpated by 2100.  In addition, cisco are influenced by the invasion of rainbow smelt, which prey on young cisco.  Projecting current estimates of rainbow smelt spread and impact into the future will result in the extirpation of about 1% of cisco populations by 2100 in Wisconsin. Overall, the effect of climate change is expected to overshadow that of species invasion as a driver of coldwater fish population extirpations. Our results highlight the potentially dominant role of climate change as a driver of biotic change.