REDUCTION OF PREDATION RISK UNDER THE COVER OF DARKNESS - AVOIDANCE RESPONSES OF MAYFLY LARVAE TO A BENTHIC FISH

被引:75
作者
CULP, JM [1 ]
GLOZIER, NE [1 ]
SCRIMGEOUR, GJ [1 ]
机构
[1] UNIV CALGARY,DEPT BIOL SCI,DIV ECOL,AQUAT GRP,CALGARY 12N 1N4,ALBERTA,CANADA
关键词
PREDATION RISK; BEHAVIORAL RESPONSE; MAYFLY; FISH; STREAMS;
D O I
10.1007/BF00317527
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Mayfly larvae of Paraleptophlebia heteronea (McDunnough) had two antipredator responses to a nocturnal fish predator (Rhinichthys cataractae (Valenciennes)): flight into the drift and retreat into interstitial crevices. Drift rates of Paraleptophelbia abruptly increased by 30 fold when fish were actively foraging in the laboratory streams but, even before fish were removed, drift began returning to control levels because larvae settled to the substrate and moved to areas of low risk beneath stones. This drifting response was used as an immediate escape behaviour which likely decreases risk of capture from predators which forage actively at night. Surprisingly, drift most often occurred before contact between predator and prey, and we suggest that in darkness this mayfly may use hydrodynamic pressure waves for predator detection, rather than chemical cues, since fish forage in an upstream direction. Although drifting may represent a cost to mayfly larvae in terms of relocation to a new foraging area with unknown food resources, the immediate mortality risk probably out-weighs the importance of staying within a profitable food patch because larvae can survive starvation for at least 2 d. In addition to drifting, mayflies retreated from upper, exposed substrate surfaces to concealed interstitial crevices immediately after a predator encounter, or subsequent to resettlement on the substrate after predator-induced drift. A latency period was associated with this response and mayflies remained in these concealed locations for at least 3 h after dace foraging ceased. Because this mayfly feeds at night and food levels are significantly lower in field refugia under stones, relative to exposed stone surfaces, predator avoidance activity may limit foraging time and, ultimately, reduce the food intake of this stream mayfly.
引用
收藏
页码:163 / 169
页数:7
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