Stockwell Jason D, O'Malley Brian P, Hansson Sture, Chapina Rosaura J, Rudstam Lars G, Weidel Brian C
Rubenstein Ecosystem Science Laboratory University of Vermont Burlington VT U.S.A.
U.S. Geological Survey Great Lakes Science Center Oswego NY U.S.A.
Freshw Biol. 2020 Nov;65(11):1997-2009. doi: 10.1111/fwb.13594. Epub 2020 Jul 23.
Diel vertical migration (DVM) is common in aquatic organisms. The trade-off between reduced predation risk in deeper, darker waters during the day and increased foraging opportunities closer to the surface at night is a leading hypothesis for DVM behaviour.Diel vertical migration behaviour has dominated research and assessment frameworks for , an omnivorous mid-trophic level macroinvertebrate that exhibits strong DVM between benthic and pelagic habitats and plays key roles in many deep lake ecosystems. However, some historical literature and more recent evidence indicate that mysids also remain on the bottom at night, counter to expectations of DVM.We surveyed the freshwater literature using Web of Science (WoS; 1945-2019) to quantify the frequency of studies on demographics, diets, and feeding experiments that considered, assessed, or included that did not migrate vertically but remained in benthic habitats. We supplemented our WoS survey with literature searches for relevant papers published prior to 1945, journal articles and theses not listed in WoS, and additional references known to the authors but missing from WoS (e.g. only 47% of the papers used to evaluate in situ diets were identified by WoS).Results from the survey suggest that relatively little attention has been paid to the benthic components of ecology. Moreover, the literature suggests that reliance on sampling protocols using pelagic gear at night provides an incomplete picture of populations and their role in ecosystem structure and function.We summarise current knowledge of DVM and provide an expanded framework that more fully considers the role of benthic habitat. Acknowledging benthic habitat as an integral part of ecology will enable research to better understand the role of in food web processes.
昼夜垂直迁移(DVM)在水生生物中很常见。白天在更深、更暗的水域中捕食风险降低,而夜间在靠近水面处觅食机会增加,这种权衡是DVM行为的一个主要假设。昼夜垂直迁移行为在一种杂食性中营养级大型无脊椎动物的研究和评估框架中占据主导地位,这种动物在底栖和浮游生境之间表现出强烈的DVM,并且在许多深水湖泊生态系统中发挥着关键作用。然而,一些历史文献和最新证据表明,糠虾在夜间也会留在水底,这与DVM的预期相反。我们使用科学网(WoS;1945 - 2019)调查了淡水糠虾文献,以量化关于种群统计学、饮食以及喂养实验的研究频率,这些研究考虑、评估或纳入了未进行垂直迁移而是留在底栖生境中的糠虾。我们通过搜索1945年之前发表的相关论文、WoS未列出的期刊文章和论文,以及作者已知但WoS遗漏的其他参考文献(例如,用于评估原位饮食的论文中只有47%被WoS识别)来补充我们的WoS调查。调查结果表明,相对较少关注糠虾生态学的底栖部分。此外,文献表明,依赖夜间使用浮游设备的糠虾采样方案,无法全面了解糠虾种群及其在生态系统结构和功能中的作用。我们总结了当前关于糠虾DVM的知识,并提供了一个更全面考虑底栖生境作用的扩展框架。认识到底栖生境是糠虾生态学的一个组成部分,将使研究能够更好地理解糠虾在食物网过程中的作用。