A long-lived, estuarine-resident fish species selects its macroinvertebrate food source based on certain prey and predator traits

Author(s):  
Ian C. Potter ◽  
Angie-Riitta Kanandjembo ◽  
Alan Cottingham ◽  
Thomas H. Rose ◽  
Thea E. Linke ◽  
...  
2017 ◽  
Vol 100 (9) ◽  
pp. 1121-1137 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joel Williams ◽  
Jeremy S. Hindell ◽  
Greg P. Jenkins ◽  
Sean Tracey ◽  
Klaas Hartmann ◽  
...  

PLoS ONE ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 9 (7) ◽  
pp. e101727 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luciana Almeida Watanabe ◽  
Marcelo Vallinoto ◽  
Nils Asp Neto ◽  
Janice Muriel-Cunha ◽  
Ulrich Saint-Paul ◽  
...  

2007 ◽  
pp. 37-44
Author(s):  
Lajos Juhász

The Bódva is one of our rivers that flow outside the Hungarian borders and arrive to the country across the frontier.The Bódva is approximately 110 kilometres long, its upper course is mountaneous- like in its springfield in Slovakia and it reaches the Sajó by flowing among the lower hilly region. The river wall is ravine-like in more places, the river itself is devious, and the water basin is rather variable as in the underlay muddy segments and heavily shingly beds can also be found.By its fish fauna and physico-chemical characteristics, the Bódva is such aliving water that-after Borne and others (Nowicki, Thienemann) river zone system- can be regarded as an almost uniform typical Barbel zone.According to our research program (2001-2005) and literature resources we estimated the fish fauna of the Bódva on both the Slovakian and Hungarian course. From some four decades to the wide ecofaunistic examinations of the near past we surveyed the quondam and present fish species of the Bódva River. According to our survey some 40 species compose the recent fish fauna of this river.In the fish fauna of the Bódva those fish species that presently own a tight ecospectrum, sensitive to the changes of the environment thus so called indicator species, can also be found just like the less sensitive, invasive, aggressively reproducing species. By examining the changes in the fishfauna, the complex of those biogen and abiogen processes that affect the river can be indicated well. It can be stated that the fishfauna of the Bódva is rather rich with a countrywide measure also, and maintain a lot of rare, regressive protected and worth while protection species.In the last period of the construction, the racial and quantitive composition of the fishfauna of the upper course of the Bódva has changed significantly. Certain species (in the Hungarian course) has vanished almost totally or at least their number declined not ably. Among the vanishing species there are not only a few substantial, protected species of the fauna (e.g. Barbus pelononnesius petényi, Leucaspius delineatus, Zingel sterber, Barbatula barbatula), but the number of the once mass species also decreased appreciably (e.g. Rhodeus sericeus, Alburnoides bipunctatus, Cobitis elongatoides). With the above mentioned changes the number of other animals also decreased in the course that we examined (e.g. mussels, crabs). We examine the cause of these changes in the pollution of the river and according to that in the decrease of the food source and the negative changes of the physico-chemical parameters of the water.


Parasitology ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 136 (11) ◽  
pp. 1291-1303 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. MUÑOZ ◽  
Y. CORTÉS

SUMMARYThe different species of a fish assemblage can, to some extent, be similar in terms of their parasite communities, which can be associated with certain ecological host traits. This study compared the parasite community descriptors between temporal and resident fish species composing an intertidal assemblage from central Chile. Host specificity and similarity indices of parasite communities among the fish species were also considered. A total of 1097 fish representing 14 species were collected during spring and summer of 2 consecutive years. A total spectrum of 40 parasite species was found, of which copepods and trematodes were the commonest. Congeneric fish species had the highest similarities in their parasite communities. Based on a cluster analysis, using only some fish species, no group was distinguished using abundance or prevalence of parasites, because 50% of parasite species had high host specificity and only few of them were shared among fish species. Adult parasites showed high host specificity and were found mainly in resident intertidal fish, whereas the temporal fish had parasites with different degrees of specificity. Consequently, resident intertidal fish were characterized by their own parasite species, meaning that their transmissions might be restricted to the intertidal zone.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniele D’Agostino ◽  
Carlos Jimenez ◽  
Tom Reader ◽  
Louis Hadjioannou ◽  
Stephanie Heyworth ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTThe detrimental effects of invasion by Indo-Pacific lionfish (Pterois volitans/miles) on western Atlantic fishes have spurred concerns for Mediterranean fish biodiversity, where a Lessepsian invasion of lionfish has recently begun. In order to assess the potential impact on biodiversity, we examine key behavioural and ecological traits of lionfish, and the resident fish community in the Mediterranean, that may contribute to lionfish invasion success. We focus on Cyprus, where lionfish populations were first sighted in 2012 and have now established abundant and stable populations. Using field observations, we examine lionfish predatory behaviour and feeding ecology, and resident fish species naiveté to hunting lionfish. Our findings suggest that lionfish in the Mediterranean are crepuscular generalist predators, with prey targeted dominated by small-bodied benthic or bentho-pelagic associated species. Such prey are more likely to be native than introduced (Lessepsian) fishes, with native prey fishes showing greater naiveté towards lionfish than Lessepsian prey species. Notably, one of the Mediterranean’s key ecological fish species (the native damselfish Chromis chromis), showed the highest level of naiveté and was the most heavily targeted prey. Overall, lionfish in the Mediterranean show similar predatory behaviour and ecology to their western Atlantic counterparts. Although the Mediterranean invasion is still relatively recent, it may result in a similar disruption to reef fish biomass to that recorded in the Atlantic, with impact to the structure and biodiversity of reef fish communities and the services they provide.


2007 ◽  
Vol 97 (4) ◽  
pp. 486-497 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michéle de O. D. A. Corrêa ◽  
Virgínia S. Uieda

The objective of this study was to analyze the diet of fish species that use the mangrove vegetation for shelter and feeding in a river southeastern Brazil. The fieldwork, including collecting and underwater observations, was carried out in the dry (July and August 2004) and in the rainy season (February and March 2005) in order to assess the existence of seasonal variation in the diets. Seven kinds of food items were consumed, two of plant origin and five of animal origin. Crustaceans predominated in the diet of most species, either in the form of unidentified fragments or discriminated in eight groups. The predominance of species using mainly a single food source (crustaceans, principally Ostracoda and Tanaidacea) and the existence of seasonal variation in the diets of some species became very evident in the analysis food niche breadth, with a predominance of dietary specialists. In the Rio da Fazenda mangrove, the submersed marginal vegetation was used by the ichthyofauna as a locale for foraging, and principally as cover by bottom-feeding species. These species may be using the vegetation for protection from aerial and aquatic predators, or even from the pull of the current during the turn of the tide. In the study area, the great diversity of crustaceans constitutes an important food source for most fish species which adjusted their diet according to seasonal changes in food availability and to interactions with other species.


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