Culp Joseph M, Glozier Nancy E, Scrimgeour Garry J
Ecology Division (Aquatic Group), Department of Biological Sciences, University of Calgary, 12N 1N4, Calgary, Alberta, USA.
Oecologia. 1991 Apr;86(2):163-169. doi: 10.1007/BF00317527.
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 Paraleptophlebia 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 behavior 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.
异叶拟细蜉(麦克多诺)的蜉蝣幼虫对夜间鱼类捕食者(明太鱼(瓦朗谢讷))有两种反捕食反应:逃入漂流物中以及退回到间隙裂缝中。当鱼类在实验室溪流中积极觅食时,异叶拟细蜉的漂流率突然增加了30倍,但即使在鱼类被移除之前,漂流率就开始恢复到对照水平,因为幼虫沉降到基质上并移动到石头下方风险较低的区域。这种漂流反应被用作一种即时逃避行为,这可能会降低夜间积极觅食的捕食者捕获的风险。令人惊讶的是,漂流最常发生在捕食者与猎物接触之前,并且我们认为在黑暗中这种蜉蝣可能利用水动力压力波来检测捕食者,而不是化学线索,因为鱼类是向上游方向觅食的。尽管就迁移到一个食物资源未知的新觅食区域而言,漂流可能对蜉蝣幼虫来说是一种代价,但直接的死亡风险可能超过留在一个有利可图的食物斑块内的重要性,因为幼虫可以在饥饿状态下存活至少2天。除了漂流,蜉蝣在遇到捕食者后,或者在捕食者引起的漂流后重新安置在基质上之后,会立即从上部暴露的基质表面退回到隐蔽的间隙裂缝中。这种反应存在一个潜伏期,并且在雅罗鱼停止觅食后,蜉蝣会在这些隐蔽的位置停留至少3小时。因为这种蜉蝣在夜间觅食,并且相对于暴露的石头表面,石头下的野外避难所中的食物水平要低得多,避免捕食者的活动可能会限制觅食时间,并最终减少这种溪流蜉蝣的食物摄入量。