Resource Sharing Among Darters in an Ohio Stream
- 1 April 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by JSTOR in The American Midland Naturalist
- Vol. 107 (2) , 294-304
- https://doi.org/10.2307/2425380
Abstract
Predator-prey interactions involving 3 darter species (Etheostoma caeruleum, E. zonale and E. blennioides) and macroinvertebrates of the upper Little Miami River, Ohio, and the extent of seasonal food and habitat partitioning among these fishes were quantified. Food overlap values (C.lambda.) based on biomass were generally lower than those computed from the numbers of prey items in the annual diets (C.gamma. = 0.41-0.75 and 0.72-0.84, respectively). These differences reflected size-selective feeding behavior and variability in the dry weights of food organisms. Feeding intensity was influenced by water temperature, while the contributions of the various invertebrate taxa to the diets shifted with changes in the abundances of these forms. E. zonale and E. blennioides selected food items in the size ranges of 1-5 and 1-6 mm, respectively; the range for E. caeruleum was 1-9 mm. Darter numbers in the riffles changed seasonally in response to the timing of reproduction. These shifts resulted in low overlap values (C.gamma. = 0.41-0.44) based on habitat use. The darters coexist through resource sharing which reduces interspecific competition for food and space.This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit:
- Reliability Estimates for Ivlev's Electivity Index, the Forage Ratio, and a Proposed Linear Index of Food SelectionTransactions of the American Fisheries Society, 1979