1. We examined whether long-term exposure to chemical cues of predatory longear sunfish (Lepomis megalottis) affected growth and rates of leaf processing by the isopod, Lirceus fontinalis, an important facultative shredder in low-order streams in the eastern United States, and whether isopods habituated to sunfish chemicals. 2. Long-term (24 days) exposure to fish chemicals did not affect growth or the extent of leaf processing by isopods in the laboratory. Thus, chemical cues alone may not be important in triggering long-term predator avoidance behaviours that could potentially reduce fitness or affect community processes like litter breakdown. 3. Isopods exposed to fish chemicals for 3, 9 and 15 days were significantly more active than individuals unexposed to fish chemicals, when transferred to another environment with fish chemicals. This result, coupled with results of the growth experiment, suggests that isopods habituate to fish chemical stimuli and that time to habituation is c. 3 days or less. Because fish chemicals can mislead prey about predator presence, and hence be a non-threatening stimulus, they are probably important in eliciting only short-term antipredatory behaviours by isopods.