Browsing by Subject "Thermal-Optical Habitat"
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Item Prey Behavior to Predator Growth: The Influence of Light Intensity on Predator-Prey Interactions in North Temperate Lakes and Rivers(2024-08) Michels, NolandAbiotic and biotic conditions interact to influence fish behavior, which can scale up temporally to affect growth and population dynamics. My dissertation includes four unique studies that improve our knowledge of how predator-prey interactions change across species and diel periods, and the translation of individual interactions into effects on long-term growth rate. My first study tested the predator avoidance behaviors of invasive (round goby; Neogobius melanostomus) and native (mottled sculpin; Cottus bairdii) prey fishes from active (smallmouth bass, Micropterus dolomieu) and ambush (burbot; Lota lota) predators at multiple light intensities. Round goby were more successful at avoiding predators as they have an increased flight initiation distance, flee at angles closer to their theoretical optimal, and made more turns during an escape. Next, I examined the scotopic spectral sensitivity of adult walleye (Sander vitreus) and then observed age-0 walleye foraging behavior under their optimal wavelength. I found that walleye were most sensitive to 500-550 nm light. Under 525 nm light, age-0 walleye had the most reactions and attacks on prey from 1.58 × 1011 - 3.16 × 1013 photons m-2 s-1 (nautical-civil twilight). To test whether individual interactions translated to effects on growth, as well as the effect of light intensity, I tested the growth rates of age-0 walleye under 525 nm light at three intensities and three staining levels. I observed a higher growth rate in darker, heavily stained water and lowest growth rates were in bright, clear conditions. Lastly, I combined information from the previous chapters into an individual-based model on walleye foraging and tested whether light intensity, temperature, and prey density affected growth rates of a walleye population. Growth rate was greatly affected by temperature and prey density independently, but light intensity did not influence growth rate. Light intensity had a large influence on predator and prey behavior, but extrapolating these behavioral effects over time as measured by growth rate showed light intensity had limited effects.