Effects of prey dispersal on predator–prey interactions in streams |
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Authors: | J. Dahl L. Greenberg |
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Affiliation: | Department of Ecology, Limnology, Ecology building, S-223 62 Lund, Sweden,;†Department of Nature and Environment, University of Karlstad, S-651 88 Karlstad, Sweden |
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Abstract: | 1. We studied the effect of mesh size (6 and 3 mm) on interactions between brown trout ( Salmo trutta ) and benthic invertebrates in enclosures placed in a stream in southern Sweden. We also compared how different prey exchange rates affected interactions between trout and invertebrates. 2. Trout had strong impacts on some benthic taxa, and different mesh sizes produced different patterns. Trout affected the abundance of 10 of the 21 taxa examined, six in enclosures with 3 mm mesh and six in enclosures with 6 mm mesh. The abundance of nine of the prey taxa was lower in the presence of trout, only leptocerids were more numerous in the presence of trout. 3. Our measurements of prey immigration/emigration, together with trout diet data, suggest that direct consumption by trout, rather than avoidance behaviour by prey, explains most decreases in prey abundance. There was avoidance behaviour by only two of the twenty-one prey taxa, with trout inducing emigration of the mayflies Baetis rhodani and Paraleptophlebia sp. 4. Trout indirectly increased periphyton biomass in both 3 and 6 mm enclosures. The effect of trout on periphyton was probably due to strong effects of trout on the grazer, Baetis rhodani , Heptagenia sp. and Paralepthoplebia sp. 5. Our results suggest that mesh size, through its effects on exchange rates of prey, may affect interactions between predators and prey in running waters, but that the effects of dispersal and predation on invertebrates are taxon specific. |
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Keywords: | fish predation dispersal brown trout invertebrates streams drift predator avoidance direct predation |
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