FishPredation

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Fish Predation

Common Methods

  • Stalking
  • Chasing
  • Ambush
  • Habituation
  • Angling

Predation Model

  • Energy vs. Cost
  • Search → Encounter → Strike → Capture
  • Factors Affecting Search:

For Predator: Hunger For Prey: Camouflage

  • Factors Affecting Encounter

For Predator: Swimming Speed, water clarity, illumination, schooling, detection mechanisms For Prey: morphology, activity level, pigmentation, distribution

    • Factors Affecting Strike
  • For Predator: alternative prey, location

For Prey: body size, sensory ability

  • Factors Affecting Capture

For Predator: mouth gape, strike speed, handling For Prey: escape capabilities, schooling, shelter seeking behavior

References: K.M. Bailey, JT. Duffy Anderson. 2001. Fish Predation and Mortality. Encyclopedia of Ocean Sciences (Second Edition). Pages 417-421.

Other Feeding Factors

  • Size is the most important factor in determining predation rates

ex: There is a decreasing rate of predation with Jellyfish as fish larvae size increases.

  • Predation happens at all sizes

Ex: microscopic organisms to large whales

  • Highest rates of predation occur on juvenile fish.
  • Predation is most common during life transitions.

Ex: after fish larvae hatch

  • Most are active either during the day or at night, not 24 hours
  • Diurnal or nocturnal feeding is normally fixed genetically

Importance of Predation

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