The effect of flow speed and food size on the capture efficiency and feeding behaviour of the cold-water coral Lophelia pertusa
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Orejas, C. (Covadonga); Gori, A. (Andrea); Rad-Menéndez, C. (Celia); Last, K.S. (Kim S.); Davies, A.J. (Andrew J.); Beveridge, C.M. (Christine M.); Sadd, D. (Daniel); Kiriakoulakis, K. (Konstadinos); Witte, U. (Ursula); Roberts, J.M. (John Murray)Date
2016-08Tipo
research articlePalabras clave
Trophic ecologyLophelia pertusa
NE Atlantic
Flow speed
Feeding experiments
Behavioural experiments
Résumé
The capture efficiency and feeding behaviour of the cold-water coral (CWC) Lophelia pertusa (Linnaeus, 1758) were investigated considering: (1) different food types, (2) different food sizes and (3) different current speeds and temperatures. This study used two different multifactorial experimental approaches: (1) Corals were subjected to three different flow speeds (2, 5 and 10 cm s− 1) in 5 l volume tanks, and three different food types (alive zooplankton, alive algae, and dry particulate organic carbon) were offered to the corals under each current regime, analysing the capture rates of the corals under these different flow velocities. (2) In a flume, the feeding behaviour of the coral polyps was studied under different current speed regimes (1, 7, 15 and 27 cm s− 1) and a temperature change over a range of 8–12 °C. The obtained results confirm that low flow speeds (below 7 cm s− 1) appear optimal for a successful prey capture, and temperature did not have an effect on polyp expansion ...
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