Abstract

Direct observations of feeding behaviour in Branchinecta gaini are described. B. gaini possess sophisticated food manipulation behaviours, using their abdominal appendages to ‘scrape’ at and carry away food items. Scraping behaviour was employed by animals for both detrital feeding and the cannibalisation of dead conspecifics. In the absence of like observations from other non-raptatory species of Branchinecta, it appears that adults of B. gaini occupy an intermediary position between species that feed exclusively on vegetative and detrital material and those (e.g. B. gigas, B. ferox, B. raptor) that are known to be carnivorous. In an Antarctic context, particularly, specialisation towards carnivory would have little adaptive value, while expansion of diet breadth via increased manipulative and digestive flexibility would, on the other hand, be advantageous. These behaviours, moreover, mean that B. gaini plays an active role in the breakdown and recycling of its own nutrient base.

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