Abstract

Experiments were conducted to determine whether overlap between microhabitat preferences and activity periodicities of four mayfly species and their stonefly predators could explain species-specific differences in predator-prey encounter frequencies. Preferences for rock type (slate or granite), flow microhabitat (high or low), rock surface (top, bottom, upstream or downstream sides), and periodicity of drift and the use of rock tops were measured in a stream-side system of flow-through circular Plexiglas chambers receiving natural stream water and light levels. These parameters were compared among the predatory stoneflies, Megarcys signata or Kogotus modestus, and four species of mayflies that vary in their encounter rates with the stoneflies. Based on predator-prey encounter rates previously observed in similar chambers, we expected greater overlap between Megarcys and Ephemerella infrequens and the overwintering generation of the bivoltine mayfly, Baetis bicaudatus than with Cinygmula sp. Likewise, we expected Kogotus microhabitat use to overlap more strongly with that of summer generation Baetis than with later instars of Cinygmula and Epeorus deceptivus. Results ran counter to our predictions, indicating that microhabitats of the prey species with high predator encounter rates did not overlap more strongly with the stoneflies than did mayflies with low predator encounter rates. Most mayflies and stoneflies preferred the bottom surfaces of granite rocks, and showed few flow preferences. Most were nocturnal in their use of top rock surfaces, in drift and feeding activity periodicity. Therefore, nocturnal activity periodicities of both mayflies and stoneflies confirm that mayflies have not evolved feeding periodicity to avoid encounters with foraging stonefly predators. We conclude therefore, that neither temporal nor spatial microhabitat overlap is a reasonable explanation of differential encounter rates between predatory stoneflies and their mayfly prey. Alternative explanations for differential encounter rates are that more abundant or more mobile mayflies have higher encounter rates with predators, and effective pre-contact predator avoidance responses of other mayflies reduce their encounter rates with stoneflies.

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