4.4 Article

Temperature and its impact on predation risk within aquatic ecosystems

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CANADIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING, NRC RESEARCH PRESS
DOI: 10.1139/cjfas-2015-0302

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  1. NSERC

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Metabolic rates of fish and their activity levels have thermal optima. When environmental temperatures are below these optima, increasing temperature will increase their rates of energy consumption, resulting in a corresponding increase in the risk of starvation. For that reason we predicted that within this temperature range, food is of greater value at higher temperatures so fish should be willing to incur greater costs to obtain it. To test this hypothesis, we measured how the activity and foraging rates of the fathead minnow (Pimephales promelas) changed with temperature at 4, 15, and 24 degrees C. As expected, fish activity and foraging were greater at higher temperatures. We then measured the impact of predation risk on foraging decisions at 5, 15, and 23 degrees C. At 5 and 15 degrees C, the risk of predation had a significant effect on foraging decisions, but there was no effect at 23 degrees C. These results demonstrate that increasing temperatures below their optimal level diminish the impact of predation risk on foraging behaviour and may mean that the direct consumptive effect of predators on aquatic communities will be greater at warmer temperatures while the risk of predation will become a less important factor, and vice versa.

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