4.6 Article

Evidence that fish structure the zooplankton communities of turbid lakes and reservoirs

Journal

FRESHWATER BIOLOGY
Volume 56, Issue 2, Pages 352-365

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2427.2010.02503.x

Keywords

clay; Daphnia; planktivore; predation; sediment

Funding

  1. Austin College Cullen Foundation
  2. Sid Richardson Foundation

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P>1. Visually foraging fish typically exclude large zooplankton from clear-water lakes and reservoirs. Do fish have the same effect in turbid waters, or does turbidity provide a refuge from visual predation? 2. To test the hypothesis that fish exclude large zooplankton species from turbid sites, I searched for populations of medium or large Daphnia species in turbid, fish-containing reservoirs of south-central Oklahoma and north-central Texas, U.S.A., and surveyed the literature for accounts of Daphnia species in turbid habitats worldwide. 3. Only small Daphnia species and the exuberantly spined Daphnia lumholtzi were detected in the turbid reservoirs. The Daphnia species in the reservoirs are smaller than other Daphnia species that occur in the area but were not detected. An extensive survey of the literature suggests that large Daphnia may be found in the lakes of extreme turbidity [Secchi disk depth (SD) < 0.2 m] but that only small and spiny Daphnia are likely to occur in more typical turbid locations (1.0 m > SD > 0.2 m) unless some additional factor reduces the influence of fish predation in such sites. 4. The field samples from Texas and Oklahoma together with the literature review suggest that the effect of visually foraging planktivorous fish on the size structure of turbid-water zooplankton communities may often be as strong or even stronger than the effect of fish on clear-water zooplankton communities.

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