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From individuals to populations : prey fish risk-taking mediates mortality in whole-system experiments

journal contribution
posted on 2003-09-01, 00:00 authored by Peter BiroPeter Biro, J Post, E Parkinson
Recent research suggests that the behavior of individuals under risk of predation could be a key link between individual behavior and population and community dynamics. Yet existing theory remains largely untested at large spatial and temporal scales. We manipulated food available to age-0 rainbow trout while at risk of cannibalism, in a replicated factorial whole-lake experiment, to test whether the trade-off between growth and mortality rates is mediated by foraging activity by young fish under predation risk. We found that this trade-off exists for young fish at the whole-system scale, and that food-dependent behavioral variation has large mortality consequences. In high-food lakes, age-0 trout spent less time moving, fewer individuals swam continuously, and those swimming continuously swam at slower speeds relative to those in low-food lakes. Age-0 trout also used deep, risky habitats less when food was abundant. This lower activity, combined with avoidance of risky habitats, coincided with 68% higher survival in high-food lakes. If general, this trade-off may be a key mechanism linking individual behavior to population-level processes in size-structured populations.

History

Journal

Ecology

Volume

84

Issue

9

Pagination

2419 - 2431

Publisher

Ecological Society of America

Location

Ithaca, N.Y.

ISSN

0012-9658

eISSN

1939-9170

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2003, Ecological Society of America