FUNCTIONAL-RESPONSE AND CAPTURE TIMING IN AN INDIVIDUAL-BASED MODEL - PREDATION BY NORTHERN SQUAWFISH (PTYCHOCHEILUS-OREGONENSIS) ON JUVENILE SALMONIDS IN THE COLUMBIA RIVER
Authored by Donald L DeAngelis, JH Petersen
Date Published: 1992
DOI: 10.1139/f92-282
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Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
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Abstract
The behavior of individual northern squawfish (Ptychocheilus
oregonensis) preying on juvenile salmonids was modeled to address
questions about capture rate and the timing of prey captures (random
versus contagious). Prey density, predator weight, prey weight, temperature, and diel feeding pattern were first incorporated into
predation equations analogous to Holling Type 2 and Type 3 functional
response models. Type 2 and Type 3 equations fit field data from the
Columbia River equally well, and both models predicted predation rates
on five of seven independent dates. Selecting a functional response type
may be complicated by variable predation rates, analytical methods, and
assumptions of the model equations. Using the Type 2 functional
response, random versus contagious timing of prey capture was tested
using two related models. In the simpler model, salmon captures were
assumed to be controlled by a Poisson renewal process; in the second
model, several salmon captures were assumed to occur during brief
`'feeding bouts'', modeled with a compound Poisson process. Salmon
captures by individual northern squawfish were clustered through time, rather than random, based on comparison of model simulations and field
data. The contagious-feeding result suggests that salmonids may be
encountered as patches or schools in the river.
Tags
time
Frequency
Stizostedion-vitreum-vitreum
Largemouth bass
Oncorhynchus-nerka
Fishes
Smallmouth bass
Food-consumption
John-day-reservoir
Prey-encounter