Are you looking at frequency of dace visit or time spent on stones as a function of prey density? If you are examining either of those, why not regression? If you are looking at how distribution of dace relates to that of prey density, I don't think the size of stone matters.
At 04:38 PM 4/24/98 EDT, you wrote: >Dear fish folks, > > I have been studying foraging behavior by longnose dace, Rhinichthys >cataractae, in the Coweeta Creek Drainage (southern North Carolina). One of >the questions I am addressing is whether longnose dace are responding to >variability in macroinvertebrate density on individual stones by foraging >with greater intensity on stones with high prey density. In order to test >this question, I observed longnose dace forage upon 100 stones, counted the >number of bites taken from each stone, and collected macroinvertebrates from >each stone. There were great differences in macroinvertebrate density on >individual stones, so I felt there was good reason for longnose dace to forage >with higher intensity on stones with high prey density. My question is: > >How can I say (statistically) that great differences existed in >macroinvertebrate density per stone? > >Normally, one would take a variance/mean ratio or compare counts data with >a poisson distribution in order to state that prey were clumped or uniformly >distributed among individual stones. However, 1) my data was collected from >stones which varied in size (i.e. quadrant size differed among samples), and >2) I am using macroinvertebrate biomass instead of number for my units. As I >mentioned above, there were great differences in the biomass density of >macroinvertebrates on stones (there was a 250 fold difference in biomass >density between the lowest and highest density stones) and I just need a >method to express this quantitatively. > >I realize this is a pretty specialized problem, but I would appreciate any >feedback. > >Thank you very much, >Andrew Thompson >University of Georgia >graduate student > >*************************************************************** > <To leave send SIGNOFF FISH-SCI to [log in to unmask]> ><For information send INFO FISH-SCI to [log in to unmask]> >*************************************************************** > > ****************************************************** Ralf Riedel Department of Ecology, Ethology, and Evolution The University of Illinois, and The Center for Aquatic Ecology - INHS 607 East Peabody Dr. Champaign, IL 61820 217-244-5511
Home address: Box 2731-A Champaign - IL 61825 USA *****************************************************
*************************************************************** <To leave send SIGNOFF FISH-SCI to [log in to unmask]> <For information send INFO FISH-SCI to [log in to unmask]> ***************************************************************
|