Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4396917 Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 2009 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

Prey may select suboptimal habitat to alleviate predation risk. Algal blooms and turbidity are potentially harmful to prey in aquatic environments, but can provide refugia against predation, given that predators avoid such conditions. Using a flow-through aquarium, we experimentally studied the habitat choice of the three-spined stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus L.) provided with toxic and non-toxic bloom-forming cyanobacteria and green flagellate-induced turbidity in the presence and absence of a chemical predator signal from a perch (Perca fluviatilis L.). We investigated whether sticklebacks separate between different algal strains and between turbid and clear water, and whether they are able to use algal toxicity and turbidity as shelter against predators. Sticklebacks preferred the toxic over the non-toxic Nodularia spumigena (Mertens) habitat in the presence of a predator signal, whereas no differences in times spent in the two habitats were detected when the predator signal was absent. There was a tendency for sticklebacks to prefer clear over turbid water in the absence of a predator signal, but no differences were found when the predator signal was present. Our results suggest that the three-spined stickleback is not fully adapted to the cyanobacterial blooms and turbidity caused by the recent eutrophication of the Baltic Sea. However, the predator-induced shifts in habitat choice are also consistent with the hypothesis that sticklebacks use algal toxicity and turbidity as shelters against predation, since these factors are likely to have only minor fitness consequences for sticklebacks.

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Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Aquatic Science
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