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Morphological and Trophic Features of the Invasive Babka gymnotrachelus (Gobiidae) in the Plain and Mountainous Ecosystems of the Dniester Basin: Spatiotemporal Expansion and Possible Threats to Native Fishes

Fishes 2023 5 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Doru Bănăduc S. A. Afanasyev, Doru Bănăduc Doru Bănăduc Olena Hupalo, Doru Bănăduc Doru Bănăduc N. V. Tymoshenko, О. М. Lietytska, S. A. Afanasyev, Anatolii Roman, О. В. Мантурова, Doru Bănăduc Doru Bănăduc Doru Bănăduc Doru Bănăduc Doru Bănăduc

Summary

Researchers examined the morphological and trophic features of the invasive racer goby Babka gymnotrachelus in both plain and mountainous rivers of the Dniester basin, documenting its recent expansion to elevations above 300 m. They found adaptive morphological changes in mountainous subpopulations - including smaller body size and increased streamlining - with Chironomidae and Trichoptera as primary prey, while native fish species so far show high resilience against the invasive species.

Over the last few years, the racer goby B. gymnotrachelus quickly expanded in the mountainous rivers of the Dniester basin at aheight of 300 m a.s.l. and above. The occurrence frequency of the racer goby in fish communities in the mountainous rivers of the Carpathian ecoregion remains low (up to 20%), as compared with the plain rivers, where the species occurs in 70–100% of cases. The major prey groups in its diet in both plain and mountainous were Chironomidae, Diptera, and Crustacea. Chironomidae formed the maximal portion (35% at an occurrence frequency of 72.5%), and Trichoptera formed 18%at an occurrence frequency of 41%, whereas fish larvae were absent in their diet in mountainous rivers. The peculiar environmental conditions of mountainous rivers caused the adaptive modifications of the morphological features of the racer goby at the subpopulation level, which compriseda decrease inthe specimens’ size in rivers with a flow velocity of above 1.5 m/s and rivers with pebble contentsof above 50%in the bottom sediments.The modifications showed an increase inbody streamlining as an adaptation to flow velocity and turbulence and the stony substrate of the river’s bottom. Thus, the morphological adaptation of B. gymnotrachelus to the conditions of the mountainous rivers is in progress, and the formationof astable population in these rivers can be expected. In contrast, the native fish species’ resilience in the face of newcomers is still high, and this is because their alevins are not food for invaders.

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