Food habit divergence between white-spotted charr and masu salmon in Japanese mountain streams: circumstantial evidence for competition |
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Authors: | H Miyasaka S Nakano T Furukawa-Tanaka |
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Institution: | (1) Research Institute for Humanity and Nature, Takashima-cho, Kamikyo-ku, Kyoto 602-0878, Japan Tel. +81-75-229-6111; Fax +81-75-229-6150 e-mail: prey@chikyu.ac.jp, JP;(2) Center for Ecological Research, Kyoto University, Otsu, Japan, JP;(3) Division of Ecology, Museum of Nature and Human Activities, Sanda, Japan, JP |
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Abstract: | The diet and foraging microhabitat of white-spotted charr, Salvelinus leucomaenis, were compared between mountain stream reaches where it occurs with (sympatric) and without (allopatric) masu salmon, Oncorhynchus masou masou, a potential competitor, to examine the evidence for interspecific competition between these fish, which commonly co-occur
in Japanese mountain streams. In three streams examined, the similarity between the diets of allopatric charr and salmon was
much greater than that between the diets of sympatric charr and salmon. Both allopatric charr and sympatric salmon intensively
utilized terrestrial invertebrates among stream drifts (52%–65% of the diet), whereas this prey category made up only an intermediate
portion of sympatric charr diets (11%–29%). Examination of available prey composition in stream drifts showed that the consumption
of terrestrial invertebrates by allopatric charr and sympatric salmon was approximately twice as much as that by sympatric
charr. The presence of salmon, a potential competitor, may alter the diet of charr in the sympatric reaches. Charr holding
focal points closer to the streambed were considered less efficient than sympatric salmon in their utilization of terrestrial
invertebrates drifting primarily on the stream surface, although the foraging microhabitat of the charr was not influenced
by the salmon. The mechanisms responsible for the dietary divergence between sympatric charr and salmon are probably the consequence
of scramble competition over terrestrial invertebrates drifting on the stream surface.
Received: January 21, 2002 / Accepted: November 19, 2002
Acknowledgments We thank Y. Tokuda, T. Takasu, Y. Kaneda, H. Jyoya, and H. Aoe for their assistance. This work was partly supported by funding
through the Takara Harmonist Fund by the Takara Syuzo Co. Ltd. and the Japan Ministry of Education, Science, Sport and Culture
(grants 09NP1501 and 11440224).
Correspondence to:H. Miyasaka |
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Keywords: | Scramble competition Foraging microhabitat Diet divergence Stream salmonids Terrestrial invertebrate |
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