0000000000073274
AUTHOR
Pertti Tikkanen
Short-term recovery of benthos following disturbance from stream habitat rehabilitation
The recovery of benthic macroinvertebrates after disturbance from stream rehabilitation was studied in the River Livojoki, northern Finland. The stream that had been channelized for log transport was rehabilitated on 1 July 1992 by digging holes and inserting boulders. We measured habitat characteristics and sampled benthic animals before and after rehabilitation, including an unrehabilitated control site. The immediate effect of rehabilitation was a slight decrease in the abundances of benthic insects. Recolonization occurred rapidly, within 10 days. Disturbance of the rehabilitation did not have a detectable effect on the macroinvertebrate community. Most species-level changes and communi…
Nocturnal drift of mayfly nymphs as a post-contact antipredator mechanism
SUMMARY 1. The predominantly nocturnal constrained drift of stream invertebrates is commonly regarded as a behaviour that avoids encounters with visually foraging fish in the water column. The alternative explanation, that drift peaks are caused by bottom-feeding, nocturnal predators, has rarely been tested. 2. We examined these hypotheses by collecting invertebrate drift in five streams in northern Finland: one with brown trout (Salmo trutta, a drift-feeding fish), one with alpine bullhead (Cottus poecilopus, a benthic fish), one with both species, and two fishless streams. 3. Drift by Baetis mayflies was aperiodic or slightly diurnal in both fishless streams on all sampling occasions. In …
Diel vertical movements by lotic mayfly nymphs under variable predation risk
Summary 1. The diel foraging periodicities of two grazing mayfly (Ephemeroptera) nymphs, Heptagenia dalecarlica and Baetis rhodani, under variable fish (European minnow) predation risk were examined in a series of laboratory experiments. 2. Heptagenia dalecarlica were almost exclusively nocturnal in their use of feeding areas on stone tops. There was a sharp increase in the proportion of nymphs out of refuge at nightfall, both in the control and fish-odour treatments. In a treatment with freely moving fish, H. dalecarlica decreased their activity during both the day and night. In feeding trials with three freely foraging minnows, nymphs were completely safe when they had access to refuges b…
Collectivity in ‘‘spherical’’Eu143,144nuclei
Long cascades of stretched E2 transitions have been observed in $^{143}\mathrm{Eu}$ and $^{144}\mathrm{Eu}$ nuclei which at low excitation exhibit spherical shape. Lifetime experiments demonstrate high collectivity values up to B(E2)\ensuremath{\approxeq}100 W.u. among these E2 cascades. The total Routhian surface calculations indicate many crossing rotational bands of the nucleus with triaxial shape at ${\mathrm{\ensuremath{\beta}}}_{2}$\ensuremath{\approxeq}0.25 and \ensuremath{\gamma}\ensuremath{\approxeq}30\ifmmode^\circ\else\textdegree\fi{}. The E2 cascades in $^{143}\mathrm{Eu}$ are proposed to represent the \ensuremath{\nu}${\mathit{h}}_{11/2}^{2}$\ensuremath{\pi}${\mathit{h}}_{11/2}…
Fishless-stream mayflies express behavioural flexibility in response to predatory fish
The fish avoidance behaviour of nymphs of the grazing mayfly Baetis rhodani (Ephemerop- tera) was examined. The nymphs originated from a fishless stream. To study their responses to the addition of predator cues, nymphs were exposed to (1) chemical cues from a caged fish, or (2) a freely moving diurnal fish (European minnow, Phoxinus phoxinus). The nymphs immediately increased their refuge use when exposed to a live fish, whereas chemical cues alone did not cause any avoidance responses. In a second experiment, the eVects of (1) fish chemicals and (2) a fish model plus fish chemicals on the diel refuge use patterns of Baetis nymphs were examined. In the presence of a fish model, more nymphs…