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Foraging behaviors and the interaction of alewife,Alosa pseudoharengus,and bloater,Coregonus hoyi
Authors:Larry B Crowder  Fred P Binkowski
Institution:(1) Laboratory of Limnology, Department of Zoology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, 53706, U.S.A.;(2) Center for Great Lakes Studies, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, 53201, U.S.A.
Abstract:Synopsis Alewife, Alosa pseudoharengus, and bloater, Coregonus hoyi, are common planktivores in Lake Michigan. Both alewife and bloater use a variety of feeding modes. Alewives can filter, gulp and particulate feed; bloaters can only gulp and particulate feed. We examined handling time per prey and probability of capture for alewife and bloater particulate feeding on Mysis relicta. Using these estimates and available data for filtering alewives, cost curves were derived for alewife and bloater particulate feeding and for alewife using all three modes of feeding. Alewives filter small prey relative to their own body size and particulate feed on larger prey. Feeding mode appears to be dependent on prey size and density and shifts in feeding mode are apparently based on maximizing biomass eaten per time. The ability to filter confers a competitive advantage on alewife when small prey are abundant as they were in the mid 1960s in Lake Michigan. If the zooplankton are large, bloater young-of-year do not suffer this relative disadvantage. In fact, large bloaters can consume prey on the bottom not available to alewife. This shifting competitive balance may explain, in part, the observed dynamics of alewife and bloater.
Keywords:Filter feeding  Foraging modes  Lake Michigan  Mysis relicta  Optimal foraging  Particulate feeding  Predation  Prey escape  Zooplankton
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