Pond-adjacent grass height and pond proximity to water influence predation risk of pond fish by amphibians in small fish ponds of Kakamega County, western Kenya
The study investigated predation risk to pond-reared Nile Tilapia Oreochromis niloticus and African Catfish Clarias gariepinus by amphibians, whether this is driven by height of pond-side grass or pond proximity to surface-water source and how this varies with fish stocking options. Based on small-s...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Hydrobiologia 2021-05, Vol.848 (8), p.1795-1809 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The study investigated predation risk to pond-reared Nile Tilapia
Oreochromis niloticus
and African Catfish
Clarias gariepinus
by amphibians, whether this is driven by height of pond-side grass or pond proximity to surface-water source and how this varies with fish stocking options. Based on small-scale freshwater aquaculture farms in western Kenya, field surveys were conducted during three sampling seasons spread across 6 months. These involved the following: (1) a sociological survey of 29 fish farming households; (2) sampling of amphibians for density, species richness and encounter rates and (3) measuring grass height, pond dimensions and water-source proximity across 24 ponds. Overall, 131 individual frogs from three families were recorded in 78 encounters. Amphibian density increased with pond-side grass height, presumably increasing predation risk, but decreased with water-source proximity. Amphibian encounter rate also decreased with water-source proximity, but was unaffected by grass height, while species richness responded positively to pond-side grass height, but not to water-source proximity. Amphibian encounter likelihood was higher in tilapia-only than in catfish-only or tilapia and catfish ponds irrespective of habitat variables. We demonstrate here that management practices for mitigating fish loss to predatory amphibians should include trimming pond-side vegetation, siting ponds close-to-moderate distances from water-sources and including catfish in pond polycultures. |
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ISSN: | 0018-8158 1573-5117 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s10750-021-04551-8 |