Abstract
ate significantly less than at those at 23 C or 26 C, but feeding rates did not differ at the two higher temperatures. Feeding rates in the laboratory were similar to those measured in open areas of a pond at the same temperatures; temperature alone may explain some feeding rate variation in natural systems. Tadpoles in the light and in the dark ate similar amounts. A nocturnal decline in feeding rates observed in nature cannot be attributed to darkness.
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