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Visual isolation furthers access to drift‐feeding positions for subordinate juvenile brown trout (Salmo trutta) in dominance hierarchies
Authors:Roussel  J&#;M  & Agnès  B
Institution:(1;INRA, UMR EQHC, Laboratoire d'écologie aquatique, 65 rue de Saint‐Brieuc, CS 84215, F‐35042 Rennes cedex, France; 2;INRA, Station d'hydrobiologie BP3, Unitéde recherche en écologie comportementale, F‐64310 Saint‐Pée sur Nivelle, France).
Abstract:Juvenile salmonids are visual predators that primarily feed on drifting invertebrates and compete for suitable feeding positions in swift water. We used an outdoor experimental stream to test the effect of visual isolation on agonistic interactions and habitat use by age‐1 brown trout ( Salmo trutta ) in riffle‐pool sections. We hypothesized that dominant fish defend suitable feeding positions in riffle and that visual obstruction between individuals enhance access to riffle for subordinates. Groups of juveniles, caught in the wild, were stocked in high and low visibility treatments. Visual isolation was manipulated by placing dark plastic ribbons or opaque Plexiglas boards onto the substrate of riffles. As expected, dominant fish held profitable positions in riffle and the proportion of fish in riffle significantly increased in presence of artificial structures. In high visibility treatment, the dominant fish despotically excluded subordinates from the riffle. In low visibility treatment, the proportion of fish that foraged on benthic prey in the pool and the number of major aggressive acts (chase, nip) decreased. Our results support the hypothesis that screening effect of physical structures in the water column loosen resource monopolization in dominance hierarchies of juvenile salmonids.
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