Seasonal feeding selectivity of brown trout Salmo trutta in five groundwater-dominated streams

Availability and selection of macroinvertebrate prey is important to explain temporal and spatial variation in growth among stream salmonids. However, few studies contain information to identify such relationships. Our objectives were to quantify drift and benthic macroinvertebrate prey availability...

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Main Authors: Jennifer Lynn Cochran-Biederman, Bruce Vondracek
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2017-01-01
Series:Journal of Freshwater Ecology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02705060.2017.1386595
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spelling doaj-3f84cd9fdaa54c1ebbf9cfcf5dc0c4032020-11-25T01:46:27ZengTaylor & Francis GroupJournal of Freshwater Ecology0270-50602156-69412017-01-0132165367310.1080/02705060.2017.13865951386595Seasonal feeding selectivity of brown trout Salmo trutta in five groundwater-dominated streamsJennifer Lynn Cochran-Biederman0Bruce Vondracek1Winona State UniversityWildlife, and Conservation Biology, University of MinnesotaAvailability and selection of macroinvertebrate prey is important to explain temporal and spatial variation in growth among stream salmonids. However, few studies contain information to identify such relationships. Our objectives were to quantify drift and benthic macroinvertebrate prey availability and selection by brown trout on a seasonal basis in five streams across three years in southeastern Minnesota. Few taxa were dominant in diets and the environment with considerable variability in drifting and benthic prey within streams and seasons. Brown trout consistently selected only one or two taxa, and displayed neutral or negative selection for other taxa. In general, large-bodied, energy-rich benthic prey were selected over other more abundant aquatic macroinvertebrate taxa and drifting prey. Foraging patterns suggested a preference of benthic feeding. Electivity of benthos and drift varied spatially and temporally with a negative relationship between the total proportion of prey available and prey electivity. In general, seasonal growth and prey electivity were not related across all streams, but were positively related within two of five streams. Understanding seasonal and spatial relationships among growth, prey availability, and prey selection may aid future management of streams, as climate change is expected to alter physical conditions and biological communities of streams.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02705060.2017.1386595Brown troutdriftless ecoregionseasonal dietprey selectivitygroundwater-dominated streams
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jennifer Lynn Cochran-Biederman
Bruce Vondracek
spellingShingle Jennifer Lynn Cochran-Biederman
Bruce Vondracek
Seasonal feeding selectivity of brown trout Salmo trutta in five groundwater-dominated streams
Journal of Freshwater Ecology
Brown trout
driftless ecoregion
seasonal diet
prey selectivity
groundwater-dominated streams
author_facet Jennifer Lynn Cochran-Biederman
Bruce Vondracek
author_sort Jennifer Lynn Cochran-Biederman
title Seasonal feeding selectivity of brown trout Salmo trutta in five groundwater-dominated streams
title_short Seasonal feeding selectivity of brown trout Salmo trutta in five groundwater-dominated streams
title_full Seasonal feeding selectivity of brown trout Salmo trutta in five groundwater-dominated streams
title_fullStr Seasonal feeding selectivity of brown trout Salmo trutta in five groundwater-dominated streams
title_full_unstemmed Seasonal feeding selectivity of brown trout Salmo trutta in five groundwater-dominated streams
title_sort seasonal feeding selectivity of brown trout salmo trutta in five groundwater-dominated streams
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Journal of Freshwater Ecology
issn 0270-5060
2156-6941
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Availability and selection of macroinvertebrate prey is important to explain temporal and spatial variation in growth among stream salmonids. However, few studies contain information to identify such relationships. Our objectives were to quantify drift and benthic macroinvertebrate prey availability and selection by brown trout on a seasonal basis in five streams across three years in southeastern Minnesota. Few taxa were dominant in diets and the environment with considerable variability in drifting and benthic prey within streams and seasons. Brown trout consistently selected only one or two taxa, and displayed neutral or negative selection for other taxa. In general, large-bodied, energy-rich benthic prey were selected over other more abundant aquatic macroinvertebrate taxa and drifting prey. Foraging patterns suggested a preference of benthic feeding. Electivity of benthos and drift varied spatially and temporally with a negative relationship between the total proportion of prey available and prey electivity. In general, seasonal growth and prey electivity were not related across all streams, but were positively related within two of five streams. Understanding seasonal and spatial relationships among growth, prey availability, and prey selection may aid future management of streams, as climate change is expected to alter physical conditions and biological communities of streams.
topic Brown trout
driftless ecoregion
seasonal diet
prey selectivity
groundwater-dominated streams
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02705060.2017.1386595
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