Te. Essington et al., Role of satiation in the functional response of a piscivore, largemouth bass (Micropterus salmoides), CAN J FISH, 57(3), 2000, pp. 548-556
Citations number
38
Categorie Soggetti
Aquatic Sciences
Journal title
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FISHERIES AND AQUATIC SCIENCES
We evaluated whether satiation regulates the predation rates of a piscivore
, largemouth bass (Micropterus salmoides), in natural settings. A functiona
l response model indicated that predation rates can be reduced by satiation
when mean prey density is high or when prey encounters are highly patchy.
We then used bioenergetics modeling to estimate the predation rates of indi
vidual bass in four lakes during a 16-year period and used stomach content
mass in diet samples to evaluate the variability in daily predation rates.
Predation rates, expressed as the proportion (p) of the maximum daily consu
mption rate, were low (mode = 0.3, mean = 0.4). Stomach fullness (s), expre
ssed as the proportion of the stomach fullness associated with the maximum
sustainable consumption rate, was highly variable, and 13% of all bass diet
s had s > 1, indicating that bass could opportunistically forage at rates e
xceeding their maximum sustainable rate. The low predation rates and the ab
ility to consume prey at rates exceeding the maximum sustainable rate make
it unlikely that satiation was an important constraint on bass predation ra
tes. Thus, satiation effects widely represented in modeling studies may be
a rare component in piscivore-prey interactions, while prey behavior may be
a more important component governing predation rates.