Observations of the free-swimming behavior of Acartia tonsa: Effects of food concentration and turbulent water motion
1994
Saiz, Enric
13 pages, 5 figures, 7 tables
Show more [+] Less [-]The free-swimming behavior of the calanoid copepod Acartia tonsa is described as a function of food concentration and quantified turbulence. In still water, Acartia spent most of its time feeding. Time allocated to feeding bouts did not change much as a function of food concentration (from 98% to 81%). Functional response to food was mainly determined by the duration of feeding bouts and the proportion of time spent in them. Lengthy feeding bouts might be involved with the actual capture and ingestion of food, while brief feeding bouts might be involved in the search for an optimum food density and the discrimination of food quality. Turbulence did not affect the amount of time allocated to feeding bouts but induced a significant shift to bouts of shorter duration at low food concentration. Computed encounter rates were 2.5 times higher in the presence of turbulence and indicated that turbulence intensity might have been enough to increase realized food concentrations to levels comparable to satiation at some of the low food concentrations tested
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