Social behavior and feeding ability of two phenotypes of Gasterosteus aculeatus in relation to their spatial and trophic segregation in a temperate lake

Significant differences in morphology, vertical distribution, aggressiveness, and feeding habits were found between limnetic and benthic forms of the threespine stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) in a small coastal British Columbian lake. In deep laboratory aquaria, simulating lake pelagic and b...

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Main Author: Larson, Gary Lee
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2011
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/32728
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-327282018-01-05T17:46:47Z Social behavior and feeding ability of two phenotypes of Gasterosteus aculeatus in relation to their spatial and trophic segregation in a temperate lake Larson, Gary Lee Significant differences in morphology, vertical distribution, aggressiveness, and feeding habits were found between limnetic and benthic forms of the threespine stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) in a small coastal British Columbian lake. In deep laboratory aquaria, simulating lake pelagic and benthic regions, the benthic form was aggressive, solitary, and attracted to bottom cover, in which it remained. The limnetic form, in contrast, was gregarious, non-aggressive, attracted to surface cover, and seldom found near the bottom. In shallow aquaria, representing littoral lake regions, limnetic stickleback were aggressive and non-gregarious until cover was added, whereafter most individuals established residence in it and became significantly less aggressive. Benthic stickleback put into shallow aquaria huddled in small groups until cover was added, after which they spaced themselves out. These results were consistent with differences in the behavior of the two forms of stickleback in the field. The limnetic form fed heavily on zooplankton in the lake, while the benthic form mostly ate macro-benthos, Gammarus being its principal prey. Laboratory studies compared the feeding rates of both phenotypes; that of the limnetic form was highest on plankton, while that of the benthic form was highest on araphipods. The extensive dissimilarities demonstrated in social behavior and feeding ability of the two forms of stickleback indicate that their spatial and trophic segregation In Paxton Lake are due mainly to innate behavioral differences, rather than interaction. Science, Faculty of Zoology, Department of Graduate 2011-03-22T20:01:46Z 2011-03-22T20:01:46Z 1972 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/32728 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. University of British Columbia
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language English
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description Significant differences in morphology, vertical distribution, aggressiveness, and feeding habits were found between limnetic and benthic forms of the threespine stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) in a small coastal British Columbian lake. In deep laboratory aquaria, simulating lake pelagic and benthic regions, the benthic form was aggressive, solitary, and attracted to bottom cover, in which it remained. The limnetic form, in contrast, was gregarious, non-aggressive, attracted to surface cover, and seldom found near the bottom. In shallow aquaria, representing littoral lake regions, limnetic stickleback were aggressive and non-gregarious until cover was added, whereafter most individuals established residence in it and became significantly less aggressive. Benthic stickleback put into shallow aquaria huddled in small groups until cover was added, after which they spaced themselves out. These results were consistent with differences in the behavior of the two forms of stickleback in the field. The limnetic form fed heavily on zooplankton in the lake, while the benthic form mostly ate macro-benthos, Gammarus being its principal prey. Laboratory studies compared the feeding rates of both phenotypes; that of the limnetic form was highest on plankton, while that of the benthic form was highest on araphipods. The extensive dissimilarities demonstrated in social behavior and feeding ability of the two forms of stickleback indicate that their spatial and trophic segregation In Paxton Lake are due mainly to innate behavioral differences, rather than interaction. === Science, Faculty of === Zoology, Department of === Graduate
author Larson, Gary Lee
spellingShingle Larson, Gary Lee
Social behavior and feeding ability of two phenotypes of Gasterosteus aculeatus in relation to their spatial and trophic segregation in a temperate lake
author_facet Larson, Gary Lee
author_sort Larson, Gary Lee
title Social behavior and feeding ability of two phenotypes of Gasterosteus aculeatus in relation to their spatial and trophic segregation in a temperate lake
title_short Social behavior and feeding ability of two phenotypes of Gasterosteus aculeatus in relation to their spatial and trophic segregation in a temperate lake
title_full Social behavior and feeding ability of two phenotypes of Gasterosteus aculeatus in relation to their spatial and trophic segregation in a temperate lake
title_fullStr Social behavior and feeding ability of two phenotypes of Gasterosteus aculeatus in relation to their spatial and trophic segregation in a temperate lake
title_full_unstemmed Social behavior and feeding ability of two phenotypes of Gasterosteus aculeatus in relation to their spatial and trophic segregation in a temperate lake
title_sort social behavior and feeding ability of two phenotypes of gasterosteus aculeatus in relation to their spatial and trophic segregation in a temperate lake
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/32728
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