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Predator-induced diet vertical migration in a planktonic copepod
Authors:Bollens  SM; Frost  BW
Institution:School of Oceanography, WB-10, University of Washington Seattle, WA 98195, USA
Abstract:Predator evasion is the most commonly hypothesized reason fordiel vertical migrations undertaken by a wide variety of planktonicorganisms in lakes and seas, yet direct evidence remains elusive.We tested the predation hypothesis by exposing enclosed populationsof a marine copepod Acartia hudsonica to caged or free-rangingindividuals of their natural predator, the planktivorous fishGasterosteus aculeatus. After little more than a week, adultcopepods changed their vertical distribution and migration behaviordepending on the presence or absence of predation. Only free-rangingfish induced vertical migration in the copepod population. Cagedfish had no effect, indicating that vertical migration was nota simple chemically mediated response of copepods to the predator.Rather, copepods seemed to react to the presence of predatorsby other means, perhaps visual or mechanical stimuli, and toexhibit a downward escape response which, because encounterswith visually orienting fish occur chiefly in the daytime, effectivelylimited the copepods' occurrence in the upper water column tothe night-time hours. Alternatively, because fish imposed heavymortality on copepods, it is possible that selective predationaltered the proportions of individuals with fixed, geneticallydetermined migration behaviors. We suggest experiments to distinguishthese alternatives.
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