NONLETHAL IMPACTS OF PREDATOR INVASION - FACULTATIVE SUPPRESSION OF GROWTH AND REPRODUCTION

被引:215
作者
FRASER, DF [1 ]
GILLIAM, JF [1 ]
机构
[1] N CAROLINA STATE UNIV,DEPT ZOOL,RALEIGH,NC 27695
关键词
ARTIFICIAL STREAM; GROWTH; HABITAT USE; HOPLIAS; PATCHES; PATCHY HABITAT; POECILIA; PREDATION; REPRODUCTION; RIVULUS; TROPICAL STREAM;
D O I
10.2307/1940172
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
We asked whether invasions by a predator in a patchy environment altered only the death rate of the prey, or whether there were also nonlethal effects, i.e., alterations in three other vital rates: net emigration, reproduction, and individual growth rates. Field studies documented the patch use of the guppy Poecilia reticulata and the killifish Rivulus hartii in pools of a second-order forest stream in Trinidad, before and after invasion by the piscivorous fish Hoplias malabaricus. Experiments revealed that the predator altered the within-pool use of space by Poecilia and Rivulus, and caused significant emigration of the prey from pools in which it was present. Further, intimidation by the predator in an experimental stream suppressed total egg production in Rivulus by approximately 50%, and created spatial patchiness (more eggs laid in safer pools) and temporal patchiness (pulses of eggs) in egg production. The presence of the predator also induced shifts to shallow riffle areas and significantly reduced the growth rate of adult but not juvenile Rivulus. In contrast to the familiar paradigm that increased predation rates result in compensatory increases in per capita reproductive rates and/or growth rates as the population is thinned, we found that the threat of predation suppressed rates of reproduction and growth in predator-occupied patches.
引用
收藏
页码:959 / 970
页数:12
相关论文
共 52 条
[11]  
Fraser D.F., 1987, P121
[12]   OBSERVATIONS ON STREAM MINNOWS IN A PATCHY ENVIRONMENT - A TEST OF A THEORY OF HABITAT DISTRIBUTION [J].
FRASER, DF ;
SISE, TE .
ECOLOGY, 1980, 61 (04) :790-797
[13]   EXPERIMENTAL EVALUATION OF PREDATOR-PREY RELATIONSHIPS IN A PATCHY ENVIRONMENT - CONSEQUENCES FOR HABITAT USE PATTERNS IN MINNOWS [J].
FRASER, DF ;
CERRI, RD .
ECOLOGY, 1982, 63 (02) :307-313
[14]   FEEDING UNDER PREDATION HAZARD - RESPONSE OF THE GUPPY AND HART RIVULUS FROM SITES WITH CONTRASTING PREDATION HAZARD [J].
FRASER, DF ;
GILLIAM, JF .
BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY AND SOCIOBIOLOGY, 1987, 21 (04) :203-209
[15]  
Gilliam J.F., 1988, P173
[16]   STRONG EFFECTS OF FORAGING MINNOWS ON A STREAM BENTHIC INVERTEBRATE COMMUNITY [J].
GILLIAM, JF ;
FRASER, DF ;
SABAT, AM .
ECOLOGY, 1989, 70 (02) :445-452
[17]   HABITAT SELECTION UNDER PREDATION HAZARD - TEST OF A MODEL WITH FORAGING MINNOWS [J].
GILLIAM, JF ;
FRASER, DF .
ECOLOGY, 1987, 68 (06) :1856-1862
[18]   DIFFERENTIAL-EFFECTS OF LARGEMOUTH AND SMALLMOUTH BASS ON HABITAT USE BY STONEROLLER MINNOWS IN STREAM POOLS [J].
HARVEY, BC ;
CASHNER, RC ;
MATTHEWS, WJ .
JOURNAL OF FISH BIOLOGY, 1988, 33 (03) :481-487
[19]   TWILIGHT ACTIVITIES OF YELLOW PERCH, PERCA-FLAVESCENS [J].
HELFMAN, GS .
JOURNAL OF THE FISHERIES RESEARCH BOARD OF CANADA, 1979, 36 (02) :173-179
[20]   THE COMBINED EFFECTS OF PREDATION RISK AND FOOD REWARD ON PATCH SELECTION [J].
HOLBROOK, SJ ;
SCHMITT, RJ .
ECOLOGY, 1988, 69 (01) :125-134