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Cover is often thought to be an important habitat characteristicfor juvenile stream salmonida. In addition to providing protectionfrom predators, cover may be associated with reduced food availability.Thus, an individual's use of cover is likely to reflect a trade-offbetween the conflicting demands of growth and survival. We measuredthe influence of cover on foraging-site selection in groupsof eight juvenile coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) by examiningtheir distribution across two stream channel patches, one providingaccess to cover but little food (the "poor" patch), the otherproviding more food but no cover (the "good" patch). Becausefish distributions in the absence of cover conformed to an idealfree distribution (IFD) for unequal competitors (i.e., the distributionof competitive abilities matched the distribution of food),we used IFD theory to quantify the energetic equivalence ofcover to the fish. In the presence of cover and a model avianpredator, use of the poor patch increased relative to the predictionsof the IFD model. Using this observed deviation from an IFD,we calculated how much extra food must be added to the goodpatch to return the distribution of fish to the previously observedIFD of unequal competitors. As predicted, adding this amountof food caused the fish to return to their previous distribution,demonstrating that IFD theory can be used to relate energy intakeand risk of predation in a common currency  相似文献   

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