Harvey B C, Stewart A J
Environmental Sciences Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, 37831-6351, Oak Ridge, TN, USA.
Oecologia. 1991 Sep;87(3):336-342. doi: 10.1007/BF00634588.
Surveys of 262 pools in 3 small streams in eastern Tennessee demonstrated a strong positive relationship between pool depth and the size of the largest fish within a pool (P<0.001). Similarly, the largest colonizers of newly-created deep pools were larger than the colonizers of shallow pools. We explored the role of predation risk in contributing to the "bigger fish - deeper habitat" pattern, which has been noted by others, by conducting five manipulative field experiments in two streams. Three experiments used stoneroller minnows (Campostoma anomalum); one used creek chubs (Semotilus atromaculatus); and one used striped shiners (Notropis chrysocephalus). The stoneroller experiments showed that survival of fish approximately 100 mm in total length (TL) was much lower in shallow pools (10 cm deep) than in deep (40 cm maximum) pools (19% versus 80% survival over 12 d in one experiment) and added cover markedly increased stoneroller survival in shallow pools (from 49% to 96% in an 11-d experiment). The creek chub experiment showed that, as for stonerollers, pool depth markedly influenced survival: the chubs survived an average of 4.9 d in shallow pools and >10.8 d in deep pools. In the striped shiner experiment in shallow artificial streamside troughs, no individuals 75-100 mm TL survived as long as 13 d, where-as smaller (20-25 mm) fish had 100% survival over 13 d. The results of the experiments show that predation risk from wading/diving animals (e.g., herons and raccoons) is much higher for larger fishes in shallow water than for these fishes in deeper water or for smaller fish in shallow water. We discuss the role of predation risk from two sources (piscivorous fish, which are more effective in deeper habitats, and diving/wading predators, which are more effective in shallow habitats) in contributing to the bigger fish - deeper habitat pattern in streams.
对田纳西州东部3条小溪中的262个水塘进行的调查表明,水塘深度与水塘内最大鱼类的大小之间存在很强的正相关关系(P<0.001)。同样,新形成的深水塘中最大的定殖者比浅水塘中的定殖者更大。我们通过在两条溪流中进行5次操纵性野外实验,探究了捕食风险在促成“大鱼 - 更深栖息地”模式(这一模式已被其他人注意到)中所起的作用。3次实验使用了石滚米诺鱼(Campostoma anomalum);1次使用了溪鲈(Semotilus atromaculatus);1次使用了条纹睛尾鮰(Notropis chrysocephalus)。石滚米诺鱼实验表明,全长约100毫米(TL)的鱼在浅水塘(10厘米深)中的存活率远低于深水塘(最大深度40厘米)(在一次实验中,12天内的存活率分别为19%和80%),增加遮蔽物显著提高了浅水塘中石滚米诺鱼的存活率(在一次11天的实验中,从49%提高到96%)。溪鲈实验表明,和石滚米诺鱼一样,水塘深度对存活率有显著影响:溪鲈在浅水塘中的平均存活时间为4.9天,在深水塘中超过10.8天。在浅人工溪边水槽进行的条纹睛尾鮰实验中,全长75 - 100毫米的个体没有一个存活长达13天,而较小的(20 - 25毫米)鱼在13天内的存活率为100%。实验结果表明,对于浅水中的大鱼来说,涉水/潜水动物(如苍鹭和浣熊)带来的捕食风险远高于深水中的这些鱼类或浅水中的小鱼。我们讨论了来自两个来源(在较深栖息地更有效的食鱼性鱼类,以及在浅栖息地更有效的潜水/涉水捕食者)的捕食风险在促成溪流中“大鱼 - 更深栖息地”模式方面所起的作用。