|
Savino, J.F. and M.J. Kostich, 2000. Aggressive and Foraging Behavioral Interactions Among Ruffe, US Geological Survey.
Reprinted from Environmental Biology of Fishes (2000) 57(3): 337-345
Aggressive and Foraging Behavioral Interactions Among Ruffe
Synopsis
The ruffe, Gymnocephalus cernuus, is a nonindigenous percid in the
Great Lakes. Ruffe are aggressive benthivores and forage over soft substrates.
Laboratory studies in pools (100 cm diameter, 15 cm water depth) were conducted
to determine whether fish density (low = 2, medium = 4, high = 6 ruffe per pool)
changed foraging and aggressive behaviors with a limited food supply of
chironomid larvae. All fish densities demonstrated a hierarchy based on
aggressive interactions, but ruffe were most aggressive at low and high fish densities.
Time spent in foraging was lowest at the low fish density. The
best forager at the low fish density was the most aggressive individual but the second most
aggressive fish at the medium and high fish density was the best forager and also
the one chased most frequently. A medium fish density offered the best energetic
benefits to ruffe by providing the lowest ratio of time spent in aggression to that spent foraging. Based on our results,
ruffe should grow best at an intermediate density with high ruffe densities, we should
also expect disparity in size as the more aggressive fish are able to
garner a disproportionate amount of the resources. Alternatively, as the Great
Lakes are a fairly open system, ruffe could migrate out of one area to colonize
another as populations exceed optimal densities.
Entire Paper
Contact:
Jacqueline Savino, US Geological Survey, Great Lake Science Center, 1451 Green Road,
Ann Arbor, MI 48105-2807
Key Words: Ruffe, Environmental_impacts,
Population_dynamics
Product Type: Research,
Impact
User Type: General
|