Mccallum, Erin
- Department of Wildlife, Fish and Environmental Studies, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
- McMaster University
Research article2025Peer reviewed
Mclean, Adrienne; Zarini, Sina; Mccallum, Erin S.; Marentette, Julie R.; Koops, Marten A.; Bolker, Benjamin M.; Balshine, Sigal
Invasive species are a global problem with large ecological and economic costs. A better understanding of how invasive species populations change over time, how these species become integrated into ecosystems, and how their population demographics vary across different environments could help inform management priorities and shape control strategies. For 20 years (2002-2022), we have monitored round goby (Neogobius melanostomus) in Hamilton Harbour, Canada, an industrial harbour and an Area of Concern with high levels of contaminants. We sampled round goby across six sites that vary in contamination levels. We first quantified changes in round goby population demographics and morphology over a twenty-year period and second, we compared how abundance and other life history trajectories differ between sites of high and low contamination. Round goby abundance and body length both decreased over the study period. In contrast, body condition, gonadosomatic index (GSI), and the proportion of guarding parental males in the population increased over time. Over the many years of monitoring, there was no clear difference in round goby abundance between sites of high and low contamination, but individuals from sites of high contamination were smaller, had larger gonad investment, and higher hepatosomatic index compared to round goby from sites of low contamination. We also found there were fewer guarding parental males at sites of high contamination. Our results are valuable because they provide insights into how invasive species interact with different invaded habitats over the long-term. This information can help researchers and managers understand the effects of invasive species and develop strategies to predict, prevent, and manage them.
Area of Concern; Round goby; Invasive species; Hamilton Harbour; Morphology
Biological Invasions
2025, volume: 27, number: 2, article number: 82
Publisher: SPRINGER
Fish and Wildlife Management
Ecology
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/140881