Microhabitat use by the rainbowfish Melanotaenia duboulayi in a subtropical Australian stream |
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Authors: | Akihisa Hattori Kevin Warburton |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Zoology and Entomology, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia,;(2) Present address: Faculty of Liberal Arts and Education, Shiga University, 2–5-1 Hiratsu, Otsu, Shiga 520–0862, Japan, e-mail: hattori@sue.shiga-u.ac.jp, Tel.: +81-77-5377852, Fax: +81-77-5377753, |
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Abstract: | Microhabitat use and feeding behavior of the rainbowfish Melanotaenia duboulayi (Castelnau) were investigated in a slow-flowing stream adjacent to riparian forest in south-eastern Queensland, Australia. Fish were more abundant in vegetated areas, but did not enter dense Vallisneria beds, where predators were observed. In sunny conditions shoals of juveniles occurred near the water surface feeding floating material on the surface, but larger fish tended to occur at the bottom near submerged vegetation, often utilizing the overhanging aquatic plant community as a refuge and food source. In the middle of the day, juveniles and small fish seemed to show behavioral thermoregulation at the surface in the warmest site. Under cloudy conditions, however, fish of all sizes preferred deeper water. The present study suggests that in still and sunny pools thermal change caused by sunlight influences the microhabitat choice of small fish. A field experiment using a kingfisher model implies that fish swimming at the surface could escape from aerial predators in sunlit conditions by responding to moving shadows, but could not do so under cloudy conditions. Electronic Publication |
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Keywords: | Aerial predator avoidance Habitat structure Size-structured population Sunlight Water temperature |
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