Abstract

Animals living in patchy environments may depend on resource pulses to meet the high energetic demands of breeding. We developed two primary a priori hypotheses to examine relationships between three categories of wading bird prey biomass and covariates hypothesized to affect the concentration of aquatic fauna, a pulsed resource for breeding wading bird populations during the dry season. The fish concentration hypothesis proposed that local-scale processes concentrate wet-season fish biomass into patches in the dry season, whereas the fish production hypothesis states that the amount of dry-season fish biomass reflects fish biomass production during the preceding wet season. We sampled prey in drying pools at 405 sites throughout the Florida Everglades between December and May from 2006–2010 to test these hypotheses. The models that explained variation in dry-season fish biomass included water-level recession rate, wet-season biomass, microtopography, submerged vegetation, and the interaction between wet-season biomass and recession rate. Crayfish (Procambarus spp.) biomass was positively associated with wet-season crayfish biomass, moderate water depth, dense submerged aquatic vegetation, thin flocculent layer and a short interval of time since the last dry-down. Grass shrimp (Palaemonetes paludosus) biomass increased with increasing rates of water level recession, supporting our impression that shrimp, like fish, form seasonal concentrations. Strong support for wet-season fish and crayfish biomass in the top models confirmed the importance of wet-season standing stock to concentrations of fish and crayfish the following dry season. Additionally, the importance of recession rate and microtopography showed that local scale abiotic factors transformed fish production into the high quality foraging patches on which apex predators depended.

Highlights

  • When food is spatially and temporally variable, animals must track resources efficiently to match the costs of their feeding efforts to the energetic demands of their life history [1,2]

  • We proposed a “fish concentration hypothesis”, predicting that fish biomass would be highest at sites with high levels of wet-season fish biomass, high recession rates, and high microtopography (Fig 1)

  • Water levels in the 2007 and 2008 dry seasons were lower than average; 2008 was unique in that a series of rainfall events in mid-February considerably increased water levels system-wide (Fig 3), in the northern Everglades, where they never receded to depths that could support wading bird foraging

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Summary

Objectives

This study aimed to quantify the effect of key hydrological and habitat parameters on dry-season prey biomass, a pulsed resource that supports breeding wading bird populations

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
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