Abstract
The susceptibility to fish predation in males, ovigerous, and non-ovigerous females of the freshwater copepod Eudiaptomus gracilis is investigated in the laboratory by direct observation of the predation sequence of zebrafish, and by studying mortality when confronted with zebrafish or roach. Ovigerous females had the highest encounter rate indicating that the highly visible egg-clutch is a major determinant of their susceptibility. Males were least successful in escaping, the main reason being their inability or disinclination to react fast enough when attacked. This difference in escape reaction may have evolved because of sex-specific requirements in mate encounter and mate location.
Ovigerous females and males had higher mortality than non-ovigerous females in all experiments while ovigerous mortality was higher than male mortality only in the zebrafish experiments. Neither experiment showed any difference in male and overall female mortality but as a consequence of the abrupt change in susceptibility between the ovigerous and non-ovigerous condition, it follows that sex-specific mortality rates may be dependent on the reproductive condition within diaptomid populations. A consequence of the sex-specific difference in escape ability is that the sex-specific mortality may be influenced by variation in the attack efficiency within and among predator populations.
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Svensson, JE. The influence of visibility and escape ability on sex-specific susceptibility to fish predation in Eudiaptomus gracilis (Copepoda, Crustacea). Hydrobiologia 234, 143–150 (1992). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00014246
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00014246