Top predators are known play an important role in the assembly of communities via two mechanisms:
Results/Conclusions
We found that the strong effects of habitat selection during colonization persisted post-colonization to the end of the study. Post-colonization fish predation also had dramatic effects on final community characteristics, but these effects differed qualitatively from the effects of habitat selection. Habitat selection, but not subsequent predation, altered the ratio of secondary to primary consumers, while post-colonization predation, but not habitat selection, resulted in a trophic cascade. We found little evidence for habitat selection modifying subsequent predation except among herbivores, where the presence of free-roaming predators increased the effects of habitat selection in the final community. Our results confirm the importance of predation as an important post-colonization process shaping aquatic communities observed in past studies, but also show that shifts in habitat selection can have large, persistent and sometimes novel effects on community assembly and structure.