Ontogenetic shift in susceptibility to predators in juvenile northern abalone, Haliotis kamtschatkana
Predation has been suggested as a major cause of juvenile mortality in benthic marine invertebrates. However, the extent to which juveniles are susceptible to predators is unknown for most species, and it remains unclear to what extent ontogenetic shifts in susceptibility to predators are common amo...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of experimental marine biology and ecology 2008-06, Vol.360 (2), p.85-93 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Predation has been suggested as a major cause of juvenile mortality in benthic marine invertebrates. However, the extent to which juveniles are susceptible to predators is unknown for most species, and it remains unclear to what extent ontogenetic shifts in susceptibility to predators are common among marine invertebrates. This study examined the northern abalone
Haliotis kamtschatkana, a species listed as threatened in British Columbia, Canada. Our goals were to characterize the diversity and abundance of species that prey on juvenile abalone and determine if abalone experience an ontogenetic shift in susceptibility to predators. Juvenile
H. kamtschatkana were found to be susceptible to a broad variety of predators: 14 of the 37 potential predator species to which we offered juvenile abalone (≤
28 mm shell length (SL)) consumed at least one juvenile abalone. Four of those species (three crabs and one seastar) consumed ≥
10% of the juvenile abalone that were offered in the laboratory. These species were present at field sites where abalone are found, indicating that they have the potential to be significant predators of juvenile
H. kamtschatkana in the wild. The most abundant predators were small crabs, especially
Lophopanopeus bellus (black-clawed crabs) and
Scyra acutifrons (sharp-nosed crabs). Juvenile
H. kamtschatkana also experienced a pronounced ontogenetic shift in susceptibility to predators. The risk of predation for juvenile
H. kamtschatkana decreased rapidly with increasing body size, especially over the 12–13 mm SL size range. Susceptibility remained low beyond 13 mm SL, indicating relatively low and unchanging levels of predation risk once the individual reaches this size. Although abalone are susceptible to several species during the first 1–2 years of life, predator effects on juvenile abalone abundance and microhabitat use may largely be attributable to the influence of only 1 or 2 predator species that can only kill abalone <
13 mm SL. |
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ISSN: | 0022-0981 1879-1697 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jembe.2008.04.004 |