Effects of piscivore-mediated habitat use on growth, diet and zooplankton consumption of roach: an individual-based modelling approach
Authored by F Holker, T Mehner, SS Haertel, S Steiner
Date Published: 2002
DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2427.2002.01002.x
Sponsors:
German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, DFG)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
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Abstract
1. We used an individual based modelling approach for roach to (i)
simulate observed diel habitat shifts between the pelagic and littoral
zone of a mesotrophic lake; (ii) analyse the relevance of these habitat
shifts for the diet, activity costs and growth of roach; and (iii)
quantify the effects of a hypothetical piscivore-mediated (presence of
pikeperch) confinement of roach to the littoral zone on roach diet, activity costs and growth.
2. The model suggests that in the presence of pikeperch, roach shifts
from zooplankton as the primary diet to increased consumption of less
nutritious food items such as macrophytes, filamentous algae and
detritus.
3. The growth of roach between May and October was predicted to be
significantly higher in the absence of pikeperch, although the net
activity costs were about 60 higher compared with the scenario where
pikeperch were present.
4. These modelling results provide quantitative information for
interpreting diel horizontal migrations of roach as a result from a
trade-off between food availability and predation risk in different
habitats of a lake.
5. Altering the habitat selection mode of planktivorous roach by
piscivore stocking has the potential to reduce zooplankton consumption
by fish substantially, and could therefore be used as a biomanipulation
technique complementing the reduction of zooplanktivorous fish.
Tags
behavior
Predation risk
Fish
Food
Rutilus-rutilus l
Perca-fluviatilis
Cyprinidae
Macrophytes
Scardinius-erythrophthalmus
Prey refuges