Predation by adults of the amphipod Monoporeia affinis on the plantigrade postlarval stage of the bivalve Macoma balthica was studied in the laboratory. We confirmed that M. affinis consumes small M. balthica. Amphipods offered 14C-labelled postlarvae took up the radioactive tracer, while those presented Rhodamine B-stained postlarvae acquired gut contents fluorescing strongly in orange, whereas control amphipods did not. Both labelling methods proved convenient to use in laboratory experiments, and are particularly useful when organisms lack structures that can be easily identified after being ingested, or when cross-over reactions may bias the results of immunoassays. The results reported here support the conclusion from earlier studies that predation by M. affinis on M. balthica can affect population dynamics of M. balthica and is likely to be an important structuring factor in the low-diversity benthic macrofauna community of the Baltic Sea.

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