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  • 1990-1994  (2)
  • 1
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: eels ; salmonidae ; competition ; chalk streams
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The age, growth, annual production and diet of the eel Anguilla anguilla were examined in a chalk stream in southern England. Growth in length fitted the von Bertalanffy model: L t = 708(1 − exp( − 0.064(t + 0.625))), where L t is the mean length (mm) at age t years. Annual length increments over the first 10 years averaged 31 mm, and annual production was 3.43 g m−2 y−1 (range 3.13–3.75). This fell to 2.09 (1.75–2.34) over two years as result of successive eel culls. Comparisons of eel diets with those of juvenile salmon Salmo salar and trout S. trutta showed that eels preyed more on benthic invertebrates, whereas the salmonids took more mid-water and surface prey. Piscivory was most marked in eels 〉400 mm, but few salmonids were eaten; most fish prey were the sculpin Cottus gobio. Attempts to reduce the eel population by successive eel culls were only partly successful because of the upstream immigration of elvers and downstream migration of silver eels into the study area. We conclude that, in this salmonid nursery stream, eels do not have a measurable effect on the salmonid population through predation or by utilizing the same food source.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1573-5125
    Keywords: Colonization ; emergence ; temporary habitat ; Chironomidae
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Colonization by midges, and temporal changes in their community structure, were examined in slow sand filter beds. The replicated beds allow the development of communities to be traced from a known starting point. The filter beds (rectangular concrete containers filled with water) have a substratum of sand on which a rich coating of organic particles develops during passage of the water through the bed. The containers (‘ponds’) are drained from time to time and the organic layer is then scraped off the sand surface. This occurs on average, once a month. The length of time the ponds were filled with water (bed run) during the present study ranged from 16 to 77 days. In long bed runs small midges with a short aquatic phase (Cricotopus sylvestris, Psectrocladius limbatellus, Tanytarsus fimbriatus) produced adults after 16–20 days; other, larger midges,e.g. Psectrocladius barbimanus and the Tanypodinae required a longer aquatic phase. Of the Tanypodinae, the smallAblabesmyia phatta, had the shortest duration of the four species found, and was much the most numerous member of this subfamily. Some Chironomini only appeared when the organic coating had developed over the sand surface. Midges of this tribe frequently failed to complete their larval development within the duration of bed runs and were thus trapped on the substratum at the time of cleaning. When ponds were drained after short bed runs the succession in community structure observed in long runs was arrested. Three small midgesC. sylvestris, P. limbatellus andT. fimbriatus, were collected in high numbers throughout the life of all beds, except towards the end of the longest runs in the study. This suggests that small size, short life cycles, and the ability to colonize ‘clean’ substrata, are important characteristics for the development of ‘primary’ chironomid communities in short-lived temporary habitats.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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