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Predation and the distribution and abundance of a pulmonate pond snail
Authors:Kenneth M Brown  Dennis R DeVries
Institution:(1) Crooked Lake Biological Station, Indiana-Purdue University at Fort Wayne, 46805 Fort Wayne, Indiana, USA;(2) Department of Biological Sciences, Indiana-Purdue University at Fort Wayne, 46805 Fort Wayne, Indiana, USA;(3) Present address: Department of Zoology, The Ohio State University, 43210 Columbus, Ohio, USA
Abstract:Summary The abundances of a freshwater pulmonate snail, Lymnaea elodes were studied in a temporary pond and a permanent, more productive pond in northeastern Indiana, USA. When snails from both populations were reared in each of the ponds in containers excluding predators, snails grew to be 1.3 to 2 times as large in the more productive pond, and laid 9 times as many eggs. However, field sampling data showed adults to be more abundant in the temporary pond. The only obvious difference between the two ponds was the presence of the molluscivorous central mudminnow (Umbra limi) in the permanent pond. These fish fed upon L. elodes when eggs and juvenile snails were abundant. In an experiment in the temporary pond, addition of mudminnows lowered egg and juvenile snail survival in pens where snail abundances had been increased. We suggest that vertebrate predators like the mudminnow can be significant sources of mortality for thin shelled species like L. elodes, possibly excluding them from habitats like lakes and rivers.Address for offprint requests
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