Abstract

A study on the colonisation of leaf detritus patches by vagile macroinvertebrates in a brackish lagoon is presented in the framework of a conceptual model where a body size-related constraint on patch use behaviour is explicitly considered. Abundance patterns of dominant macroinvertebrate taxa were characterised by short-term, non-random fluctuations, showing significant site-dependent variations. Yet, a site-independent covariation was observed between patterns’ fractal dimension and the average body mass of each taxon, indicating that, while the temporal scales characterising the colonisation patterns may be highly species-specific, cross-species generalisations are possible based on body size. The generality of these results was supported by literature data on temporal patterns of carcass colonisation by bathyal fish. The importance of size-related mechanisms in regulating the aggregation of vagile consumers on resource patches and, ultimately, their coexistence at both an inter- and intra-specific level, is discussed.

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