Publication | Closed Access
Hide, rest or die: a light‐mediated diapause response in <i>Daphnia magna</i> to the threat of fish predation
42
Citations
23
References
2004
Year
BiologyDiapause ResponseAquatic Food SystemLight‐mediated Diapause ResponseNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyPredator-prey InteractionInterspecific Behavioral InteractionEffective PredationAquatic OrganismFish FarmingAnimal BehaviorFish Predation
Summary 1. In a laboratory batch culture experiment, a diapause response of Daphnia magna to a simulated threat of fish predation was tested at various light intensities, which under natural conditions determine potential vulnerability of Daphnia to visual planktivorous fish. 2. Under moderate light intensity (1.4 μ mol m −2 s −1 ) that allows effective predation by fish, the proportion of females producing dormant eggs was significantly higher than under dim light conditions (0.001 μ mol m −2 s −1 ) that are not favourable for visual detection of prey. Production of dormant eggs was not observed in complete darkness or in treatments missing fish kairomones, irrespective of tested light conditions. 3. The observed phenomenon is interpreted as a flexible response of prey to the conditional risk of predation assessed by Daphnia according to the presence of fish‐derived cues on the one hand and the presence of dark refugia on the other. Irrespective of the presence of fish kairomones, Daphnia may not produce resting eggs as long as a safe, dark, bottom zone is accessible.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1