Abstract
Laboratory feeding preference experiments show that the maximum size of prey eaten (the snail Melampus bidentatus (Say) and the amphipod Orchestia grillus (Bosc)) increases with increasing size of the predator, Fundulus heteroclitus (L.). Melampus > 7 mm in shell height escape predation by even the largest killifish. In the laboratory, consumption of prey is reduced in high marsh habitat relative to low marsh, particularly in the case of larger fish. Low marsh has few grass stems per unit area, while high marsh is considerably more complex, with dense small stems providing cover for prey and reducing successful fish hunting. The population of Melampus in low marsh within Great Sippewissett salt marsh consists mainly of large snails but this size is rare in high marsh. The size-distribution is inverse for Orchestia, with large amphipods more abundant in high marsh. The construction of fences excluding Fundulus from the marsh surface led to low marsh size-distributions of Melampus and Orchestia resembling those of high marsh, in agreement with the laboratory results. Killifish predation seems to be an important factor regulating the abundance and size-distribution of the two prey species in the two marsh habitats.
Published Version
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More From: Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
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