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. 2014 Dec 18;115(2):227–236. doi: 10.1093/aob/mcu236

Table 2.

Trapping success of the investigated Utricularia populations; all values are objects per trap

Population Total objects Plant particles Algae Pollen grains Animals Other objects
Seetaler Lake (U. vulgaris) 31·1 ± 32·9 0·0 ± 0·1 (≈ 0·1 %) 1·9 ± 3·8 (≈ 10·2 %) 28·0 ± 32·1 (≈ 80·2 %) 0·6 ± 0·8 (≈ 4·9 %) 0·6 ± 0·7 (≈ 4·7 %)
Seetaler Lake (U. minor) 13·9 ± 9·7 0·0 ± 0·1 (≈ 0·0 %) 10·8 ± 8·2 (≈ 74·7 %) 1·8 ± 3·8 (≈ 9·7 %) 0·4 ± 1·1 (≈ 4·0 %) 0·9 ± 1·0 (≈ 11·7 %)
Seetaler Lagg (U. minor) 5·6 ± 7·5 0·0 ± 0·1 (≈ 0·2 %) 2·0 ± 5·2 (≈ 35·6 %) 2·6 ± 5·3 (≈ 34·1 %) 0·4 ± 0·8 (≈ 10·4 %) 0·6 ± 0·8 (≈ 19·9 %)
Peat Bog Schrems (U. australis) 20·3 ± 20·8 0·0 ± 0·1 (≈ 0·0 %) 17·7 ± 20·2 (≈ 74·6 %) 0·6 ± 1·6 (≈ 3·2 %) 1·1 ± 1·6 (≈ 9·8 %) 0·9 ± 0·6 (≈ 12·4 %)
Winkelauer Pond (U. australis) 4·2 ± 6·1 0·0 ± 0·1 (≈ 0·1 %) 2·5 ± 5·1 (≈ 37·4 %) 0·2 ± 1·3 (≈ 4·0 %) 0·8 ± 1·5 (≈ 19·7 %) 0·8 ± 1·1 (≈ 38·9 %)
Peat Bog Hochstand (U. australis) 6·0 ± 4·9 0·0 ± 0·1 (≈ 0·1 %) 2·3 ± 2·5 (≈ 34·1 %) 2·2 ± 2·6 (≈ 26·9 %) 0·6 ± 1·0 (≈ 12·4 %) 0·8 ± 0·6 (≈ 26·6 %)
Peat Bog Brand (U. australis) 7·6 ± 5·9 0·0 ± 0·1 (≈ 0·1 %) 2·5 ± 3·9 (≈ 25·6 %) 0·4 ± 1·0 (≈ 5·5 %) 4·4 ± 4·0 (≈ 59·1 %) 0·4 ± 0·6 (≈ 9·8 %)
Postteich (U. australis) 1·7 ± 1·5 0·0 ± 0·2 (≈ 1·5 %) 0·4 ± 0·9 (≈ 12·7 %) 0·0 ± 0·2 (≈ 1·1 %) 0·1 ± 0·4 (≈ 4·5 %) 1·2 ± 1·1 (≈ 81·7 %)

n ≥ 180 traps per population. ‘Other objects’ include detritus, protozoa, fungal hyphae and spores, Crustacean eggs, and unidentified particles (data are shown as arithmetic mean ± s.d. and as the percentage of the total prey).