scholarly journals Diel feeding behavior in the marine copepod Acartia tonsa in relation to food availability

1990 ◽  
Vol 68 ◽  
pp. 23-45 ◽  
Author(s):  
AG Durbin ◽  
EG Durbin ◽  
E Wlodarczyk
2017 ◽  
Vol 607-608 ◽  
pp. 87-94 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kamille Elvstrøm Krause ◽  
Khuong V. Dinh ◽  
Torkel Gissel Nielsen

2011 ◽  
Vol 428 ◽  
pp. 151-159 ◽  
Author(s):  
E Acheampong ◽  
RW Campbell ◽  
ABS Diekmann ◽  
MA St John

1983 ◽  
Vol 40 (4) ◽  
pp. 398-408 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lawrence M. Dill

Flexibility is an important adaptive feature of the foraging behavior of fishes, because most natural environments vary both spatially and temporally. Fish should respond to low levels of food availability by altering their behavior in ways which ensure higher feeding rates, larger feeding territories, and broader diets. It is shown that the gastric sensation of hunger and its rate of change may act as appropriate cues to food availability, and observed hunger-motivated changes in feeding behavior can produce all of these predicted effects. Data are presented to show that juvenile coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) alter their behavior in an adaptive manner when faced with variable degrees of threat of competition from territorial intruders, and of risk of predation. A review of similar studies on other species supports the generality of these results. Learning is an important mechanism providing behavioral flexibility, and changes in fish feeding behavior with experience are summarized. A graphical model is developed to show that these changes can result in training biases and food specialization. Learning also results in increased feeding rates. The consequences of these observations for the development of refined models of foraging are discussed.


2020 ◽  
pp. jeb.237297
Author(s):  
Dorsa Elmi ◽  
Donald R. Webster ◽  
David M. Fields

This study quantifies the behavioral response of a marine copepod (Acartia tonsa) to individual, small-scale, dissipative vortices that are ubiquitous in turbulence. Vortex structures were created in the laboratory using a physical model of a Burgers vortex with characteristics corresponding to typical dissipative vortices that copepods are likely to encounter in the turbulent cascade. To examine the directional response of copepods, vortices were generated with the vortex axis aligned in either horizontal or vertical directions. Tomographic particle image velocimetry was used to measure the volumetric velocity field of the vortex. Three-dimensional copepod trajectories were digitally reconstructed and overlaid on the vortex flow field to quantify A. tonsa’s swimming kinematics relative to the velocity field and to provide insight to the copepod behavioral response to hydrodynamic cues. The data show significant changes in swimming kinematics and an increase in relative swimming velocity and hop frequency with increasing vortex strength. Furthermore, in moderate-to-strong vortices, A. tonsa moved at elevated speed in the same direction as the swirling flow and followed spiral trajectories around the vortex, which would retain the copepod within the feature and increase encounter rates with other similarly behaving Acartia. While changes in swimming kinematics depended on vortex intensity, orientation of the vortex axis showed minimal significant effect. Hop and escape jump densities were largest in the vortex core, which is spatially coincident with the peak in vorticity suggesting that vorticity is the hydrodynamic cue that evokes these behaviors.


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