Invasive species triggers a massive loss of ecosystem services through a trophic cascade
University of Wisconsin–Madison
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Abstract
Despite growing recognition of the importance of ecosystem services and the economic and ecological harm caused by invasive species, linkages between invasions, changes in ecosystem functioning, and in turn, provisioning of ecosystem services remain poorly documented and poorly understood. We evaluate the economic impacts of an invasion that cascaded through a food web to cause substantial declines in water clarity, a valued ecosystem service. The predatory zooplankton, the spiny water flea (Bythotrephes longimanus), invaded the Laurentian Great Lakes in the 1980s and has subsequently undergone secondary spread to inland lakes, including Lake Mendota (Wisconsin), in 2009. In Lake Mendota, Bythotrephes has…
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Authors
3Topics & keywords
Keywords
- Trophic level
- Trophic cascade
- Cascade
- Ecosystem services
- Ecosystem
- Ecology
- Environmental science
- Environmental resource management
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Life in Land
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