2013
DOI: 10.1016/j.jglr.2013.09.006
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Laboratory-derived temperature preference and effect on the feeding rate and survival of juvenile Hemimysis anomala

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Cited by 8 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Experimental temperatures were selected to span reported tolerance and preference ranges (Ricciardi et al 2012): H. anomala was tested at 58, 108, 158, 208, 248, and 288C, and M. diluviana was tested at 58, 108, and 158C. H. anomala tolerates up to 288C (Ioffe et al 1968, Sun et al 2013, whereas survival of M. diluviana declines rapidly at and above 158C (Degraeve andReynolds 1975, Johannsson et al 2008). Temperatures were also originally chosen to provide a comparison between H. anomala and M. diluviana while extending the temperatures for H. anomala due to its higher temperature tolerance.…”
Section: Functional Response Experiments: Data Collectionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Experimental temperatures were selected to span reported tolerance and preference ranges (Ricciardi et al 2012): H. anomala was tested at 58, 108, 158, 208, 248, and 288C, and M. diluviana was tested at 58, 108, and 158C. H. anomala tolerates up to 288C (Ioffe et al 1968, Sun et al 2013, whereas survival of M. diluviana declines rapidly at and above 158C (Degraeve andReynolds 1975, Johannsson et al 2008). Temperatures were also originally chosen to provide a comparison between H. anomala and M. diluviana while extending the temperatures for H. anomala due to its higher temperature tolerance.…”
Section: Functional Response Experiments: Data Collectionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…April 2015 711 CONTEXT DEPENDENCE OF INVADER IMPACT 2008), respectively. Measurements of H. anomala growth rates at temperatures higher than 20-228C are not available to our knowledge; however, H. anomala has a unimodal temperature preference with the apex at 20-228C (Ioffe et al 1968, Sun et al 2013). Berrill and Lasenby (1983) found higher growth rates of M. diluviana at 88C compared to 48C, and Johannsson and colleagues (2008) found the minimum duration of intermolt periods at 8.58C, and loss of respiratory stability and 50% death rates at 12.78C.…”
Section: Temperature As a Mediator Of Impactmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Increasing water temperatures above the upper tolerance limit, however, have also been shown to negatively affect the survival, appetite and growth of fish as well as increase their degradation rate (Thomas et al 2000;Morgan et al 2001). The feeding and growth of many fishes increase with temperature increases up to a maximum optimum temperature and then decline with further temperature increases (Thomas et al 2000;Sun et al 2013). In this study, the predatory performance of dark sleepers increased with increasing temperatures and was stabilized in the 26-34 C temperature range.…”
Section: Effect Of Temperature and Habitatmentioning
confidence: 55%
“…H. anomala completely avoids temperatures exceeding 28 °C and has reduced survival above 30 °C (Sun et al . ), whereas M. salemaai hardly occurs above 18 °C and has increased mortality at temperatures exceeding 22 °C (Penk et al . ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%