Weber L M, Lodge D M
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Notre Dame, 46556, Notre Dame, IN, USA.
Oecologia. 1990 Jan;82(1):33-39. doi: 10.1007/BF00318530.
In the laboratory and field, we examined how periphyton (food of snails) and predatory crayfish influenced snail distribution in Trout Lake, a permanent, northern Wisconsin lake. Laboratory experiments (with no crayfish) tested the importance of periphyton biomass in determining snail preference among rocks, and among rock, sand, and macrophyte substrates. Among rocks with four different amounts of periphyton, periphyton biomass and the number of Lymnaea emarginata, Physa spp., and Amnicola spp. were positively related. A similar, but non-significant, trend occurred for Helisoma anceps. A field experiment at a site in Trout Lake where predation risk was low confirmed the preference by snails for periphyton covered rocks; more snails colonized rocks with periphyton than rocks without. When given a choice of rock, sand, and macrophytes in the laboratory, L. emarginata preferred high periphyton biomass and rock. Laboratory and field results contrasted with the distribution of snails in Trout Lake; no snails occurred in areas with abundant periphyton-covered rocks, but snails were abundant nearby on scattered rocks with little periphyton. However, where snails were absent, crayfish were abundant (14.5 crayfish-trap-day), and where snails were abundant, crayfish were rare (3.2 crayfish-trap-day), suggesting that crayfish predation reduced snails. The hypothesis that the negative association between snail and periphyton biomass resulted from snail grazing was supported by the results of a field snail enclosure-exclosure experiment (1 m cages; n=3). All experiments and observations therefore suggest that: 1) crayfish predation is more important than a preference for high periphyton biomass in determining snail distribution in Trout Lake; 2) periphyton biomass is negtively related to snail grazing; and 3) crayfish had a positive indirect effect on periphyton by preying on grazing snails.
在实验室和野外,我们研究了附着生物(蜗牛的食物)和捕食性小龙虾如何影响鳟鱼湖(位于威斯康星州北部的一个永久性湖泊)中蜗牛的分布。实验室实验(无小龙虾)测试了附着生物量在决定蜗牛对岩石之间,以及岩石、沙子和大型植物基质之间偏好的重要性。在有四种不同附着生物量的岩石中,附着生物量与缘口椎实螺、膀胱螺属和河螺属的数量呈正相关。对于钝口扁蜷,也出现了类似但不显著的趋势。在鳟鱼湖一个捕食风险较低的地点进行的野外实验证实了蜗牛对附着生物覆盖的岩石的偏好;与没有附着生物的岩石相比,更多的蜗牛在有附着生物的岩石上定殖。在实验室中,当提供岩石、沙子和大型植物供选择时,缘口椎实螺更喜欢附着生物量高的岩石。实验室和野外结果与鳟鱼湖中蜗牛的分布形成对比;在附着生物丰富覆盖的岩石区域没有蜗牛,但在附近附着生物很少的分散岩石上蜗牛很多。然而,在没有蜗牛的地方,小龙虾很多(14.5只/陷阱·天),而在蜗牛很多的地方,小龙虾很少(3.2只/陷阱·天),这表明小龙虾的捕食减少了蜗牛数量。野外蜗牛围隔-排除实验(1米的笼子;n = 3)的结果支持了蜗牛与附着生物量之间的负相关是由蜗牛啃食导致的这一假设。因此,所有实验和观察结果表明:1)在决定鳟鱼湖蜗牛分布方面,小龙虾的捕食比偏好高附着生物量更重要;2)附着生物量与蜗牛啃食呈负相关;3)小龙虾通过捕食啃食蜗牛对附着生物有积极的间接影响。