Abstract

The microhabitat of roach larvae (stages L1–L6) and 0+ juveniles was examined in a braided channel (Ilon) of the Upper Rhone River, France, from weekly samples (spring‐autumn 1985) using Point Abundance Sampling by electrofishing. During early development, microhabitat exploitation was characterized by two transitions: the first at larval step L3, when morphological and physiological attributes permit the active choice of microhabitat; the second at the end of the larval and start of the juvenile period. At larval step L3, and up to L5, roach were strongly associated with lentic waters of medium depth (0.5–1.0m) and with either macrophytes or ligneous debris. The L6 and 0+ juveniles were found more often than expected in shallower waters (< 0.2m, 0.2–0.5 m) and were no longer associated with dense vegetation or ligneous debris. However, both larval (L3–L6) and 0+ juvenile roach preferred silty sand and/or silted gravel, and a lack of current. This shift, from moderately deep waters with vegetation and/or branches as larvae to open shallow waters as juveniles, demonstrates the young roach's perception and response to environmental change, with shallows exploited as a refuge from predation when protective structures become scarce or unavailable.

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