
doi: 10.1007/bf00018689
Largemouth (Micropterus salmoide) and smallmouth (M. dolomieui) blackbasses tested in an electronic shuttlebox exhibited behavioral thermoregulatory rhythms which were temporally complementary. With a LD 12 : 12 photoperiod, M. dolomieui exhibited a preferred-temperature peak of 30.1°C during the latter portion of the photophase, when M. salmoides reached a minimum of 27.1°C. M. dolomieui exhibited a minimum of 26.6°C during the latter portion of scotophase, while M. salmoides remained at a significantly higher plateau of about 29°C, with a peak of 29.5°C at the midpoint of scotophase. The phase relations of the thermoregulatory rhythms relative to photoperiod suggest that they are endogenously timed circadian rhythms entrained by photoperiod. The thermotemporal complementarity of these rhythms suggests an aspect of niche segregation between these largely sympatric congeneric species.
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