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Fullerton, A.H., G.A. Lamberti, D.M. Lodge, and M.B. Berg, 1998. Prey Preferences of
Eurasian Ruffe and Yellow Perch: Comparison of Laboratory Results with Composition of
Great Lakes Benthos, University of Notre Dame.
Reprinted from Journal of Great Lakes Research (1998) 24(2):
319-328
Prey Preferences of Eurasian Ruffe and Yellow Perch: Comparison of
Laboratory Results with Composition of Great Lakes Benthos
Abstract:
The consumption of benthic macroinvertebrates by ruffe (Gymnocephalus cernuus)
and yellow perch (Perca flavescens), two potential competitors in the Great
Lakes, was investigated. Laboratory experiments were conducted to determine the food
preferences of ruffe and yellow perch and to compare their feeding rates on two types of
substrate (sand and cobble). For comparison with natural communities, we sampled benthic
macroinvertebrates from western Lake Michigan and compiled published data on invertebrate
community structure from all of the Great Lakes. Ruffe and yellow perch both
preferentially consumed soft-bodied taxa (e.g., chironomid midge larvae, mayflies, and
non-cased caddisflies) and avoided hard-bodied taxa (e.g., cased caddisflies, snails, and
clams) in laboratory studies. Prey preferences of fish in mixed-fish species treatments
were more diverse than those in single-fish species treatments. Ruffe and yellow perch of
similar sizes consumed approximately 5% of their body mass per 24 hours at 20°C on sand,
whereas their feeding rates were reduced by over 50% on cobble, where prey were likely
able to escape predation by hiding. Results from our laboratory experiments, field survey,
and review of published studies indicate that oligochaetes and chironomids, the two most
numerous macroinvertebrate taxa in each of the Great Lakes, are vulnerable to ruffe
predation. Less abundant taxa range from vulnerable (amphipods, flatworms, and
caddisflies) to invulnerable (sphaeriid clams, gastropods, and zebra mussels).
Our study suggests that (1) the composition of benthic macroinvertebrate fauna
in each of the Great Lakes is suitable for ruffe, and (2) ruffe and yellow perch
will likely prefer similar food resources where they co-occur.
Entire Paper
Contact: Aimee Fullerton, University of Notre Dame, Departent of
Biological Sciences, Notre Dame, IN 46556
Keywords: Ruffe, Basic_biology, Ecological_interactions
Product Type: Research, Basic_biology
User Type: General
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