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Journal article

Sizing up your enemy: individual predation vulnerability predicts migratory probability

From

Section for Freshwater Fisheries Ecology, National Institute of Aquatic Resources, Technical University of Denmark1

National Institute of Aquatic Resources, Technical University of Denmark2

Partial migration, in which a fraction of a population migrate and the rest remain resident, occurs in an extensive range of species and can have powerful ecological consequences. The question of what drives differences in individual migratory tendency is a contentious one. It has been shown that the timing of partial migration is based upon a trade-off between seasonal fluctuations in predation risk and growth potential.

Phenotypic variation in either individual predation risk or growth potential should thus mediate the strength of the trade-off and ultimately predict patterns of partial migration at the individual level (i.e. which individuals migrate and which remain resident). We provide cross-population empirical support for the importance of one component of this model--individual predation risk--in predicting partial migration in wild populations of bream Abramis brama, a freshwater fish.

Smaller, high-risk individuals migrate with a higher probability than larger, low-risk individuals, and we suggest that predation risk maintains size-dependent partial migration in this system.

Language: English
Publisher: The Royal Society
Year: 2011
Pages: 1414-1418
ISSN: 14712954 and 09628452
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2010.2035
ORCIDs: Skov, Christian and Baktoft, Henrik

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