Environmental conditions can affect the spatiotemporal variation of invasive crayfish abundance in agricultural marshlands
2025
André Mauchamp | Anne Bonis | Julie Crabot | Benjamin Bergerot | Olivier Gore | Jean-Marc Paillisson
Understanding the long-term trends of biological invasions and their drivers is a pivotal issue. However, it is challenging because collecting presence/abundance data of invasive species as well as environmental/biotic factors over a period of years is time-consuming and therefore such data is scarce compared to short-term studies. Here, we investigated whether environmental and biotic factors in highly regulated eutrophic marshlands (water regime, physico-chemistry, habitat features, and predatory fish biomass) successfully accounted for spatiotemporal trends in abundance of small and large red swamp crayfish (Procambarus clarkii) in drainage ditches over seven consecutive years. For this, we used length-frequency data collected during the annual peak in crayfish activity. We also explored whether variation in crayfish abundance over time was due to density-dependent effects (temporal autocorrelation). We found large variation in crayfish abundance expressed in capture per unit effort (CPUE) between ditches and for different years (by a factor of 10 and 6 for small and large individuals) but with no specific trend over time. No density-dependent effect was found in any of the ditches. While crayfish CPUE was poorly related to the water regime (in particular dryness intensity of ditches for small crayfish), it was favoured by densely vegetated banks and negatively linked to the density of surrounding ditches for the two life stages. No relationship was detected with predatory fish biomass or any of the other environmental factors studied. Controlling crayfish abundance by managing environmental conditions seems possible in some cases, but likely costly for other components of biodiversity. Trapping could be a possible strategy when populations dropped to low densities in places. Finally, further studies are needed in ecosystems covering a wider range of environmental conditions to provide a more comprehensive understanding of the long-term trend of the species.
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