INBIOSUR   25013
INSTITUTO DE CIENCIAS BIOLOGICAS Y BIOMEDICAS DEL SUR
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
An invader´s peculiar trophic behavior: diel fluctuations and environmental drivers
Autor/es:
SAVEANU, LUCÍA; MARTÍN, P. R.; SAVEANU, LUCÍA; MARTÍN, P. R.
Revista:
BIOLOGICAL BULLETIN
Editorial:
MARINE BIOLOGICAL LABORATORY
Referencias:
Lugar: Woods Hole; Año: 2020 vol. 239 p. 164 - 173
ISSN:
0006-3185
Resumen:
The trophic ecology of the invasive apple snail Pomacea canaliculata was intensely investigated because of the impacts of its grazing on aquatic vegetation, including crops. However, this freshwater snail also gathers food from the water surface by using a pedal funnel, a distinctive trophic behavior called pedalsurface collecting. We investigated the diel fluctuations of this trophic behavior through four whole-day field observations in a stream. We recorded the lowest pedal funnel frequencies during light hours and the highest after sunset, a pattern similar to that of general activity. We evaluated through laboratory experiments the influence of water temperature and velocity, photoperiod, and a possible endogenous rhythm on this behavior. Pedal funnels are formed within the whole temperature range in which this snail is active. The highest pedal funnel formation rates were recorded at 30 7C, but the food captured was the same regardless of temperature. Pedal funnels were not observed at water velocities above 0.12 m s21, but below this limit the rate and time spent in funnels remained constant with velocity. Despite the time of day, pedal funnels were scarce under constant artificial light, ruling out an endogenous rhythm. Both in the laboratory and in the stream, the highest levels of pedal funnels were observed during dark periods, probably as a strategy to avoid detection by visual predators. Pedal surface collecting on floating matter could represent an additional impact of invasive apple snails on freshwater ecosystems, but it could also be used for the specific delivery of molluscicides against them.