Journal
ENVIRONMENTAL BIOLOGY OF FISHES
Volume 58, Issue 4, Pages 425-438Publisher
SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1023/A:1007691425268
Keywords
Daphnia pulex; encounter rates; foraging efficiency; Pseudorasbora parva; visual predation
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Aquatic macrophytes produce considerable structural variation within the littoral zone and as a result the vegetation provides refuge to prey communities by hindering predator foraging activities. The behavior of planktivorous fish Pseudorasbora parva (Cyprinidae) and their zooplankton prey Daphnia pulex were quantified in a series of laboratory experiments with artificial vegetation at densities of 0, 350, 700, 1400, 2100 and 2800 stems m(-2). Swimming speeds and foraging rates of the fish were recorded at different prey densities for all stem densities. The foraging efficiency of P. parva decreased significantly with increasing habitat complexity. This decline in feeding efficiency was related to two factors: submerged vegetation impeded swimming behavior and obstructed sight while foraging. This study separated the effects of swimming speed variation and of visual impairment, both due to stems, that led to reduced prey-predator encounters and examined how the reduction of the visual field volume may be predicted using a random encounter model.
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