Ja. Bechara et al., THE IMPACT OF BROOK TROUT (SALVELINUS-FONTINALIS) ON AN EXPERIMENTAL STREAM BENTHIC COMMUNITY - THE ROLE OF SPATIAL AND SIZE REFUGIA, Journal of Animal Ecology, 62(3), 1993, pp. 451-464
1. The importance of space and size refugia in allowing stream benthic
insects to avoid predation by fish was tested by measuring the impact
of brook trout on drifting, epibenthic and infaunal insects of differ
ent taxa and size-classes. Experiments were carried out in a replicate
d series of pebble-bottom, outdoor channels fed by a boreal forest str
eam in Quebec, Canada. 2. Significant effects of fish on the size-stru
cture of the insect populations were observed on at least one of the t
wo sampling dates for epibenthic and drifting animals, but never for t
hose in the infauna. 3. The presence of fish significantly reduced the
density of many epibenthic and drifting insects (maximum of 36% and 2
4% of the taxa, respectively), but this impact varied with time. In co
ntrast, negative impacts on infaunal insects were few (< 11% of the ta
xa). Some small to medium-sized benthic Chironomidae and Ephemeroptera
actually increased in the presence of fish. 4. In general, insects sm
aller than 2 mm were not significantly reduced by fish predation in ei
ther the drift or the epibenthos and can thus be considered to have oc
cupied a size-refuge. The effects of fish on larger insects varied acc
ording to the taxon and the sampling date. 5. Overall, these results s
uggest that predation by brook trout can significantly reduce the dens
ity of large to medium-sized epibenthic and drifting insects, and that
rock interstices can be effective refugia from brook trout predation.
Since the infauna constitutes the largest proportion of the benthos,
these results may explain the lack of fish predatory impact frequently
reported in streams.