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The reaction distance of planktivorous fish (Scardinius erythrophthalmus) and the evasiveness of its prey (Daphnia pulex x pulicaria) under different artificial light spectra

Autor
Maszczyk, Piotr
Babkiewicz, Ewa
Tałanda, Joanna
Data publikacji
2018
Abstrakt (EN)

Artificial light at night may affect mortality risk in prey from visually oriented predators because the effect of the artificial light spectrum may differ for a predator’s visual prey detection and for prey evasiveness. To test this, we conducted two types of experiment. First, we assessed the reaction distance and swimming speed of juvenile rudd (Scardinius erythrophthalmus) allowed to forage on juvenile Daphnia pulex × pulicaria under three artificial light sources: halogen, high pressure sodium (HPS), and metal halide bulbs, at the same light intensity. Second, we assessed the evasiveness of D. pulex × pulicaria under the same artificial light sources and in darkness (as a control), in the presence and absence of chemical information on predation risk (kairomones) of juvenile rudd. We found that while both reaction distance and swimming speed of fish was greater under halogen compared to HPS, and similar under metal halide light compared to halogen and HPS, the evasiveness of Daphnia was greater under halogen and HPS-generated light than under metal halide light. The results suggest a possible mismatch of Daphnia’s behavioural response under metal halide light to predicted predation risk, and thus a possible threat to predator–prey balance in a lake ecosystem.

Słowa kluczowe EN
Artificial light at night Evasiveness Fish kairomones Predation risk Swimming speed Reaction distance
Dyscyplina PBN
nauki biologiczne
Czasopismo
Limnology
ISSN
1439-8621
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