Behavioural response to interference competition in a sessile suspension feeder

The sessile suspension-feeding worm-snailDendropoma maximaSowerby, 1825 (Vermetidae) secretes a mucous web to capture planktonic prey. In dense groups, the feeding webs of neighbouring snails frequently overlap and stick together. This may create direct food competition between neighbours because th...

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Veröffentlicht in:Marine ecology. Progress series (Halstenbek) 2008-01, Vol.353, p.131-135
Hauptverfasser: Gagern, Antonius, Schürg, Timo, Michiels, Nico K., Schulte, Gregor, Sprenger, Dennis, Anthes, Nils
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container_issue
container_start_page 131
container_title Marine ecology. Progress series (Halstenbek)
container_volume 353
creator Gagern, Antonius
Schürg, Timo
Michiels, Nico K.
Schulte, Gregor
Sprenger, Dennis
Anthes, Nils
description The sessile suspension-feeding worm-snailDendropoma maximaSowerby, 1825 (Vermetidae) secretes a mucous web to capture planktonic prey. In dense groups, the feeding webs of neighbouring snails frequently overlap and stick together. This may create direct food competition between neighbours because the earlier retracting snail may get more than its fair share of the prey. While field observations indicate that web overlap may generate retarded growth, we experimentally studied whether web overlap also triggers a phenotypic response in feeding behaviour. In our experiment we consecutively placed focal snails in a place by themselves (solitary) or close to a neighbouring snail such that webs overlapped, starting with either of the 2 conditions in half of the experimental individuals to exclude sequence effects. We found that focals retracted their feeding web significantly earlier when close to a neighbour than when solitary. Our experiments thus confirm a phenotypic response through early web retraction inD. maxima, indicating that direct interference competition affects worm-snail behaviour.
doi_str_mv 10.3354/meps07204
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source Inter-Research; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals; Jstor Complete Legacy; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Aggregation
Animal feeding behavior
Chemical suspensions
Coral reefs
Corals
Dendropoma maxima
Ecological competition
Food
Marine
Plankton
Reefs
Snails
Vermetidae
title Behavioural response to interference competition in a sessile suspension feeder
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