Food and foraging behavior in relation to microhabitat use and survival
of age-0 Atlantic salmon
Abstract:
We examined, using underwater snorkeling observations
and field experiments, the influence of food availability on foraging
behavior, habitat use, and survival of age-0 Atlantic salmon (Salmo
salar) during the critical first-summer growth period. While most feeding
attempts were directed at drifting invertebrate prey, we found a higher
rate of benthic feeding forays than previously reported for salmon.
Greater food abundance was associated with higher feeding foray rates,
more time allocated to foraging, occupancy of higher microhabitat velocities,
and greater first-year survival between two study streams. Experimental
drift reduction reduced drift foray rates and triggered a change in
behavior to increased benthic feeding. In contrast, within a single
stream, greater predicted invertebrate drift in high-velocity microhabitats
(1 m(2)) was unrelated to either microhabitat occupancy or drift foray
rates of age-0 salmon. We suggest that, in some situations, salmonid
foraging is related more directly to overall prey density than to the
availability of high-velocity, high drift rate microhabitats. Differences
in resource tracking (increased foraging, growth, or survival with increased
food abundance) at different scales, along with the use of alternative
predation modes, underscore the importance of considering behavior when
linking food resources to growth and survival of stream salmonids.
Nislow KH, Folt C, Seandel M., CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FISHERIES AND AQUATIC
SCIENCES 55 (1): 116-127 JAN 1998
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