A field based assessment of predation impacts on planktonic egg capsules across depth and flow gradients
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Authors
Orzechowski, Emily
Sloan, Leah
Journal Title
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Publisher
Friday Harbor Laboratories
Abstract
The relative rates of mortality in benthic and pelagic environments have been
proposed as a major factor structuring the evolution of complex benthic invertebrate life
histories. Field methods, such as tethering, have provided indispensable measurements of
mortality under natural conditions for the larvae of benthic invertebrates. However, few
such field studies have examined mortality rates of benthic invertebrates' early life stages
in size classes less than 1 mm. Here, we tethered egg capsules to quantify how rates of
predation vary with environmental gradients, especially distance from the benthic
substratum and flow velocity. We found that predation is consistently high on L.
scutulata egg capsules and invariant at four positions in the water column and on the
benthic substratum (average 34% loss across all treatments). Instead, the flow
environment had the greatest effect on predation rate. We hypothesize that higher
predation in the faster flow environment was due to higher encounter rates with advected
predators.
