2022
DOI: 10.3390/ani12070826
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Adaptive Vertical Positioning as Anti-Predator Behavior: The Case of a Prey Fish Cohabiting with Multiple Predatory Fish within Temperate Marine Algal Forests

Abstract: Prey fish cohabit with specialized predator fish within structurally complex habitats. How the vertical stratification of the habitat affects lethal and behavioral predator–prey interactions and contributes to explaining these patterns has never been investigated within a forest-like marine habitat, i.e., a habitat containing three vertical strata (understory, canopy, open-water above). We studied this in tank experiments, with a model prey (the wrasse Symphodus ocellatus) and two model predators (the stalk-an… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…The vertical distribution of fish is a difficult concept to grasp because it varies by habitat, fish type, and even season (Alvarez-Filip et al, 2011;Gray, 1993). The adaptation of biota to predation patterns is one factor that influences the vertical distribution pattern (Thiriet et al, 2022). Larger fish, for example, can be found in deeper water, but their distribution is more concentrated in specific areas.…”
Section: Area Density and Biomassmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The vertical distribution of fish is a difficult concept to grasp because it varies by habitat, fish type, and even season (Alvarez-Filip et al, 2011;Gray, 1993). The adaptation of biota to predation patterns is one factor that influences the vertical distribution pattern (Thiriet et al, 2022). Larger fish, for example, can be found in deeper water, but their distribution is more concentrated in specific areas.…”
Section: Area Density and Biomassmentioning
confidence: 99%