Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Group foraging by a stream minnow: shoals or aggregations?

January 1, 1992

The importance of social attraction in the formation of foraging groups was examined for a stream-dwelling cyprinid, the rosyside dace, Clinostomus funduloides. Dace arrivals and departures at natural foraging sites were monitored and tested for (1) tendency of dace to travel in groups, and (2) dependency of arrival and departure rates on group size. Dace usually entered and departed foraging sites independently of each other. Group size usually affected neither arrival rate nor departure probability. Thus, attraction among dace appeared weak; foraging groups most often resulted from dace aggregating in preferred foraging sites. The strongest evidence of social attraction was during autumn, when dace departure probability often decreased with increasing group size, possibly in response to increased threat of predation by a seasonally occurring predator. Dace also rarely avoided conspecifics, except when an aggressive individual defended a foraging site. Otherwise, there was little evidence of exploitative competition among dace for drifting prey or of foraging benefits in groups, because group size usually did not affect individual feeding rates. These results suggest that the benefits of group foraging demonstrated under laboratory conditions in other studies may not always apply to field conditions.

Publication Year 1992
Title Group foraging by a stream minnow: shoals or aggregations?
DOI 10.1016/0003-3472(92)90050-J
Authors Mary C. Freeman, G.D. Grossman
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Animal Behaviour
Index ID 5223347
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Patuxent Wildlife Research Center