Record Details

The impact of population abundance on the deposit-feeding rate of a cosmopolitan polychaete worm

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Field Value
Title The impact of population abundance on the deposit-feeding rate of a cosmopolitan polychaete worm
Names Wheatcroft, Robert A. (creator)
Starczak, Victoria R. (creator)
Butman, Cheryl Ann (creator)
Date Issued 1998 (iso8601)
Abstract The impact of population abundance on the deposit-
feeding rate of Mediomastus ambisetu (Capitellidae:
Polychaeta) was studied in still-water laboratory experiments.
Mean individual pellet production rate (mg worm¯¹ d¯¹) decreased
monotonically with increasing worm abundance in the
range of 6.5 X 10³ to 1.3 X 10⁵ worms m¯². Worms fed roughly
an order of magnitude slower in the high-density treatment
than in the low-density treatment. The vertical distribution of
pellets (i.e., sites of egestion), however, was insensitive to
changes in worm abundance. Despite the high population
abundances, the weight-% of pellets in the highest abundance
treatments was <20%. Therefore, contrary to expectations, it
was unlikely that feeding rate was limited by the availability
of ingestable particles. Rather, some combination of resource
depletion and possibly of enhanced physical or chemical interference
caused the observed decline in feeding rate at higher
population abundances. These results suggest that studies that
seek to transfer laboratory-based measures of deposit-feeding
rate to the field must be careful to match abundances in the
two domains.
Genre Article
Identifier Wheatcroft, R. A., Starczak, V. R., & Butman, C. A. (1998). The impact of population abundance on the deposit-feeding rate of a cosmopolitan polychaete worm. Limnology and oceanography, 43(8), 1948-1953.

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