Abstract

Foraging and use of cover by juvenile coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) were affected by predation threat in both seminatural channels and laboratory streams. In the field, coho salmon preferred stream sections with brushy cover only when under threat from hunting common mergansers. The mergansers had their highest capture success in pools without cover. Predation threat also caused coho salmon to use cover more as foraging habitat and to aggregate more in favourable positions at the head of the pool. In the laboratory, under simulated predation threat, fish using a refuge were significantly larger than those in the risky habitat. This pattern persisted for 2 days after the predation threat was discontinued. The average growth of coho salmon under predation threat was depressed and the difference in growth between large and small individuals was less than in control groups. We argue that larger fish were more averse to predation risk than smaller fish and that the smaller fish took advantage of feeding opportunities indirectly provided as a result of the predation risk. We speculate that in natural environments, predation may depress growth rates because of risk-avoidance behaviour but may also serve to reduce growth-rate differences among size classes within a cohort.

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