Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/14827
Title: Hypoxic environments as refuge against predatory fish in the Amazonian floodplains
Authors: Anjos, Maeda Batista dos
Oliveira, Renildo Ribeiro de
Zuanon, Jansen
Keywords: Oxygen
Animals
Behavior, Animals
Classification
Fish
Physiology
River
Animal
Behavior, Animals
Fishes
Oxygen
Rivers
Pisces
Issue Date: 2008
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: Revista Brasileira de Biologia
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: Volume 68, Número 1, Pags. 45-50
Abstract: Several groups of Amazonian fishes exhibit behavioral, morphological and physiological characteristics that allow occupying hypoxic environments, despite the energetic costs of living in such harsh conditions. One of the supposed advantages of occupying hypoxic habitats would be a lower predation pressure resulting from a lower number of piscivorous fishes in those environments. We tested this hypothesis in an area of the Amazon River floodplain through gill net fishing in normoxic and hypoxic habitats. From the 103 species caught, 38 were classified as piscivores. We found no difference in the number of piscivorous species captured in hypoxic and normoxic habitats (χ2 = 0.23; p = 0.63; df = 1) but piscivorous individuals were more numerous in normoxic than in hypoxic sampling stations (χ2 = 104.4; p < 0.001; df = 1). This indicates that environments submitted to low oxygen conditions may in fact function as refuges against piscivorous fishes in the Amazonian floodplains.
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.1590/S1519-69842008000100007
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