36 results on '"demersal fish"'
Search Results
2. Quantifying alosine prey in the diets of marine piscivores in the Gulf of Maine.
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McDermott, S. P., Bransome, N. C., Sutton, S. E., Smith, B. E., Link, J. S., and Miller, T. J.
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FISHERY management , *GEOGRAPHICAL distribution of fishes , *BLUEBACK herring , *FISH feeds , *PISCIVORES , *ANADROMOUS fishes - Abstract
The objectives of this work were to quantify the spatial and temporal distribution of the occurrence of anadromous fishes (alewife Alosa pseudoharengus, blueback herring Alosa aestivalis and American shad Alosa sapidissima) in the stomachs of demersal fishes in coastal waters of the north-west Atlantic Ocean. Results show that anadromous fishes were detectable and quantifiable in the diets of common marine piscivores for every season sampled. Even though anadromous fishes were not the most abundant prey, they accounted for c. 5-10% of the diet by mass for several marine piscivores. Statistical comparisons of these data with fish diet data from a broad-scale survey of the north-west Atlantic Ocean indicate that the frequency of this trophic interaction was significantly higher within spatially and temporally focused sampling areas of this study than in the broad-scale survey. Odds ratios of anadromous predation were as much as 460 times higher in the targeted sampling as compared with the broad-scale sampling. Analyses indicate that anadromous prey consumption was more concentrated in the near-coastal waters compared with consumption of a similar, but more widely distributed species, the Atlantic herring Clupea harengus. In the context of ecosystem-based fisheries management, the results suggest that even low-frequency feeding events may be locally important, and should be incorporated into ecosystem models. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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3. Estuarization increases functional diversity of demersal fish assemblages in tropical coastal ecosystems
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C. V. B. Passos, Vandick da Silva Batista, Nidia Noemi Fabré, Richard J. Ladle, and Ana Cm Malhado
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0106 biological sciences ,Wet season ,Abiotic component ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,biology ,Ecology ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,Species diversity ,Coastal fish ,Estuary ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Demersal fish ,Dry season ,Reef ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
This study assessed the influence of the seasonal fluctuation of abiotic conditions (wet v. dry season) on the functional diversity (FD) of tropical coastal fish assemblages. Sampling was carried out in three regions of north-east Brazil with contrasting coastlines (influenced by reef, lagoon and estuary). In each region, fishes were sampled from three depth strata (10, 20 and 30 m) and FD was estimated using an index based on key phenotypic and behavioural characteristics. All three regions had higher FD in the wet season at shallower depths, indicating the coexistence of species with low functional redundancy in sites subject to seasonal flushing of fresh water. Deeper sites had lower FD than shallower sites, although this difference was less pronounced for region 3, which is strongly affected by its proximity to the Sao Francisco estuary. The results broadly support the hypothesis that alterations in abiotic conditions in the wet season allow estuarine-adapted fishes with a different suite of functional traits to invade shallow coastal regions.
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- 2016
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4. Effects of dredging operations on the demersal fish fauna of a South American tropical-subtropical transition estuary
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Francisco José A. Cysneiros, Mário Barletta, and André R. A. Lima
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0106 biological sciences ,Biomass (ecology) ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,biology ,Ecology ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,Fauna ,Menticirrhus americanus ,Estuary ,010501 environmental sciences ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,01 natural sciences ,Demersal zone ,Dredging ,Fishery ,Demersal fish ,Dry season ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
Changes in the environment and in the composition of fish assemblages in the Paranagua Estuary (South Brazil) were assessed by comparisons made before, during and after dredging operations, in the same months and areas studied in the previous year. Interactions between year and month were observed for salinity. During the dredging year fish total density was 2 individuals m(-2) and with a total biomass of 104 g m(-2) (among 31 species captured). For the same period the year before, 0·3 individuals m(-2) and 3 g m(-2) were captured (38 species). The number of species showed significant time v. month interactions, assuming that fish species composition varied for both year and month. Total mean density and biomass showed significant differences for interaction time v. month, and density and biomass in the dredging month September 2001 in the main channel were scientifically different from other months. Interaction times v. area were significant for Cathorops spixii (increased biomass), Aspistor luniscutis (increased density), Menticirrhus americanus (decreased biomass) and Cynoscion leiarchus (decreased density and biomass). This suggests that during the dredging process there is a change in the structure of the demersal fish assemblage. The impact (damage and mortality) induced by dredging on the macrobenthic animals along the dredge path attracted adults of C. spixii that reached densities 10 times greater than in the year before. On the other hand, sciaenid species practically disappeared. To contribute to the conservation of the estuarine fish fauna, and maintain fisheries production of the Paranagua Estuary and surrounding areas, it is recommended that, dredging should be done from the late rainy season to the early dry season. Decisions must take into account the ecological cycles of socio-economically important fish species and prioritize the safe disposal of dredged spoils.
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- 2016
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5. Effects of trawling on the diets of common demersal fish by-catch of a tropical prawn trawl fishery
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Q. Dell, G. J. Coman, David Milton, Shane P. Griffiths, Margaret Miller, Mark Tonks, Richard D. Pillans, T. D. van der Velde, Melissa Duggan, Wayne Rochester, and R. H. Bustamante
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Trawling ,Ecology ,fungi ,Fishing ,Aquatic Science ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Demersal zone ,Vessel monitoring system ,Fishery ,Bycatch ,Demersal fish ,Benthic zone ,Fisheries management ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The ecological effect of prawn trawling on the benthos of the Gulf of Carpentaria, northern Australia, was investigated by examining stomach contents of common demersal fishes incidentally caught as by-catch in the fishery. Fishes were collected from high and low fishing intensity sites in three regions based on vessel monitoring system data. The diets of eight species of benthic fish predators were compared between regions and fishing intensities. A regional effect on diet was evident for seven species. Only one generalist species had no significant difference in diet among the three regions. For the comparisons within each region, five predator species had significantly different diet between high and low fishing intensities in at least one region. Across the three regions, high fishing intensity sites had predators that consumed a greater biomass of crustaceans, molluscs and echinoderms. At low fishing intensity sites, predators had diets comprising a greater biomass of cnidarians and teleosts, and a different assemblage of molluscs, crustaceans and fishes. These changes in diet suggest that there may have been a shift in the structure of the benthic community following intensive fishing. Analysis of predator diets is a useful tool to help identify changes in the benthic community composition after exposure to fishing. This study also provided valuable diet information on a range of abundant generalist benthic predators to improve the ecosystem modelling tools needed to support ecosystem-based fisheries management.
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- 2013
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6. Diet and scavenging habits of the smooth skate Dipturus innominatus
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J. Forman and Matthew Dunn
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Metanephrops challengeri ,Food Chain ,Pacific Ocean ,Macruronus ,biology ,Overfishing ,Fishes ,Pelagic zone ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Dipturus innominatus ,Gastrointestinal Contents ,Smooth skate ,Discards ,Diet ,Fishery ,Demersal fish ,Decapoda ,Animals ,Skates, Fish ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,New Zealand - Abstract
The diet of smooth skate Dipturus innominatus was determined from examination of stomach contents of 321 specimens of 29·3-152·0 cm pelvic length, sampled from research and commercial trawlers at depths of 231-789 m on Chatham Rise, New Zealand. The diet was dominated by the benthic decapods Metanephrops challengeri and Munida gracilis, the natant decapod Campylonotus rathbunae and fishes from 17 families, of which hoki Macruronus novaezelandiae, sea perch Helicolenus barathri, various Macrouridae and a variety of discarded fishes were the most important. Multivariate analyses indicated the best predictors of diet variability were D. innominatus length and a spatial model. The diet of small D. innominatus was predominantly small crustaceans, with larger crustaceans, fishes and then scavenged discarded fishes increasing in importance as D. innominatus got larger. Scavenged discards were obvious as fish heads or tails only, or skeletal remains after filleting, often from pelagic species. Demersal fish prey were most frequent on the south and west Chatham Rise, in areas where commercial fishing was most active. Dipturus innominatus are highly vulnerable to overfishing, but discarding practices by commercial fishing vessels may provide a positive feedback to populations through improved scavenging opportunities.
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- 2012
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7. Feeding ecology of King George whiting Sillaginodes punctatus (Perciformes) recruits in seagrass and unvegetated habitats. Does diet reflect habitat utilization?
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Peter I. Macreadie, Gregory P. Jenkins, and Anna E. Syme
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Food Chain ,Victoria ,biology ,Ecology ,fungi ,Feeding Behavior ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Whiting ,Perciformes ,Diet ,Predation ,Fishery ,Demersal fish ,Seagrass ,Habitat ,Animals ,Bay ,Diel vertical migration ,Ecosystem ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
This study investigated the feeding ecology of King George whiting Sillaginodes punctatus recruits to determine how diet composition varies between habitat types (seagrass and unvegetated habitats), and between sites separated by distance. Broad-scale sampling of seagrass and unvegetated habitats at nine sites in Port Phillip Bay (Australia) indicated the diet composition varied more by distance into the bay than by habitat. Near the entrance to the bay the diet was dominated by harpacticoids and gammarid amphipods, in the middle reaches of the bay the diet was completely dominated by harpacticoids, while at sites furthest into the bay, mysids and crab zoea were also important. Abundances of prey in guts was significantly higher between 1000 and 2200 hours compared with other times, indicating diurnal feeding. Laboratory determined gut evacuation rate (based on an exponential model) was estimated to be -0·54. Daily rations were highly variable among sites and habitat types. Sillaginodes punctatus recruits consumed much higher quantities of prey on unvegetated habitat than seagrass habitat at some middle reach sites; with prey consumption of harpacticoid copepods on unvegetated habitat approaching 3000 individuals per day at one site. The results of this study provide insight into why habitat associations of S. punctatus recruits within mosaics of seagrass and unvegetated habitat show high spatial variation.
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- 2011
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8. Factors affecting seasonal variations in demersal fish assemblages at an ecocline in a tropical-subtropical estuary
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Ulrich Saint-Paul, Luciano Lorenzi, M. F. M. Corrêa, F. Guebert, David V. Dantas, C. S. Amaral, and Mário Barletta
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Wet season ,Biomass (ecology) ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,biology ,Ecology ,Menticirrhus americanus ,Estuary ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Fishery ,Salinity ,Demersal fish ,Symphurus ,Dry season ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Seasonal changes of fish species composition in terms of biomass, density and number of species in three areas of the main channel of the Paranagua Estuary (axis east–west) are described in relation to seasonal fluctuations in salinity, water temperature and dissolved oxygen in the main channel. Two hundred and thirty-four samples were collected monthly, between July 2000 and June 2001, in the main channel. Seventy-nine species of 29 families were captured with a total estimated mean density and biomass of 1513 individuals ha−1 and 34 kg ha−1, respectively. The number of species and total mean density differed significantly among areas and seasons, but the total mean biomass differed only significantly throughout the ecocline (areas) of the Paranagua Estuary. For the most abundant species, the mean densities of Stellifer rastrifer, Aspistor luniscutis, Menticirrhus americanus, Sphoeroides testudineus, Cynoscion leiarchus and Symphurus tesselatus (with the exception of Cathorops spixii and Genidens genidens) differed significantly among seasons. The mean biomass of these species, with the exception of G. genidens, S. rastrifer, A. luniscutis and S. testudineus, also differed significantly for the factor seasons. Area was a significant factor for the eight most abundant species (density and biomass), except S. testudineus (density), G. genidens, C. leiarchus and S. tesselatus (biomass). The season v. area interaction term was significant for C. leiarchus (density). Most of these differences occurred during the rainy season when fishes concentrated principally in the middle of the estuary, where the salinity remained stable. It is suggested that the salinity stability in the middle of the estuary is the main reason why the most estuarine resident fish species move downstream and remain there, regardless of the increased freshwater runoff. Moreover, canonical correspondent analysis output detected that during the late rainy season, the variable dissolved oxygen (P < 0·01) was the most important environmental variable, responsible for structuring patterns of fishes assemblages in the west–east axis of Paranagua Estuary. During the end of the dry season, both salinity (P < 0·01) and dissolved oxygen (P < 0·05) were responsible for this ecological feature in the estuary. Finally, it was possible to detect that juveniles and adults of some important species respond differently to seasonal fluctuations of the ecocline-determining environmental factors. This behaviour is suggested as a strategy to avoid competition and predation during the rainy season in the middle estuary. The Paranagua Estuary did not fit with the pre-existing models described in the tropical and subtropical estuarine fish literature since its main channel fish assemblages remained within its bounds even during the rainy season.
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- 2008
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9. Feeding patterns of the dominant benthic and demersal fish community in a temperate estuary
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Henrique N. Cabral, R. Leitão, Filipe Martinho, Miguel A. Pardal, and Marina Dolbeth
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Demersal fish ,Capitellidae ,biology ,Benthic zone ,Ecology ,Crangon crangon ,Nephtys ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Zooplankton ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Spionidae ,Predation - Abstract
The diet and feeding relationships of the 12 most abundant benthic and demersal fish species of the Mondego Estuary, Portugal, were studied between June 2003 and May 2006. Fishes were caught during the night using a 2 m beam trawl. The stomach contents were analysed for prey identification, counting and weighing. According to prey importance in diets, three main feeding guilds were identified: (1) invertebrate feeders, (2) invertebrate and fish feeders and (3) plankton and invertebrate feeders. Besides these main feeding guilds, some fishes also presented fractions of algae and zooplankton in their stomach contents. The most abundant prey items were macroinvertebrates, with several polychaetes (Nephtys spp., Capitellidae, Spionidae and Eunicidae), Corophium spp. and Crangon crangon among the dominant prey. Pomatoschistus spp. were the most preyed on fishes. Several fish species showed a tendency for a specialized diet, but almost all also showed some degree of opportunistic feeding by preying on other food resources. High diet overlap was found between some fish species, yet exploitative competition could not be concluded.
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- 2008
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10. Deep-sea scavenging demersal fish fauna of the Nazaré Canyon system, Iberian coast, north-east Atlantic Ocean
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Alan J. Jamieson, Nicola J. King, Philip Michael Bagley, and Imants G. Priede
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geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Fauna ,Abyssal plain ,Submarine canyon ,Aquatic Science ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Deep sea ,Demersal zone ,Fishery ,Demersal fish ,Nazaré Canyon ,Bay ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
A baited imaging lander was deployed six times in the Nazare Canyon at depths from 909 to 4361 m during August 2005 to investigate the demersal scavenging fishes. Species observed and lander-derived abundance estimates were similar to previous data from the Porcupine Seabight and abyssal plain, north-east Atlantic Ocean.
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- 2008
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11. Structure and distribution of the slope fish community in the vicinity of the sub-Antarctic Prince Edward Archipelago
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T. Bushula, R. W. Leslie, Evgeny A. Pakhomov, S. Kaehler, and B. P. Watkins
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biology ,Trawling ,Range (biology) ,Ecology ,Fishing ,Pelagic zone ,Aquatic Science ,Intertidal ecology ,Catch per unit effort ,biology.organism_classification ,Fishery ,Demersal fish ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Trophic level - Abstract
Demersal fish community structure, distribution and trophic relationships on the slope (depth range 200–1500 m) of the sub-Antarctic Prince Edward Islands and surrounding sea rises were investigated during a pilot survey conducted in April 2001 onboard fishing vessel MV Iris. A total of 56 fish taxa were collected during the survey, of which 44 were identified to the species level, seven to the genus level and five to the family level. Among the identified taxa, 36 constituted new records for the area investigated. Total catch per unit effort (cpue) during the survey ranged from 1·1 to 241·2 individuals h−1. Both average fish diversity and total cpue positively correlated with trawling depth. Overall, mean sampling depth and near-bottom temperature explained 56% of total fish cpue. Hierarchal cluster analysis identified three distinct fish assemblages with pronounced dominant species. Major shifts in fish community composition occurred at 500–600 m and 800–900 m depth strata and could probably be a result of physical and biological vertical zonation. Analysis of the diet of selected fish species showed that they were generalist feeders, consuming predominantly pelagic, including epipelagic, meso- and benthopelagic, prey. Diets of six species and nitrogen stable isotope signatures of 22 species revealed that with a few exceptions most fishes occupied the fourth trophic level and were tertiary consumers. Wide variability in carbon isotopic signatures is discussed with respect to alternative, e.g. possible importance of high Antarctic and chemoautotrophic v. photoautotrophic sub-Antarctic primary production, organic matter sources at the base of deep-sea food webs.
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- 2006
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12. The effects of long-term exploitation of demersal fish populations off the coast of Sierra Leone, West Africa
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P. C. Coutin and A. I. Payne
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education.field_of_study ,biology ,Ecology ,Fauna ,Population ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,West africa ,Sierra leone ,Term (time) ,Fishery ,Demersal fish ,education ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The present condition of the inshore sciaenid fauna in Sierra Leone, based on the data collected in 1985–86 from commercial inshore trawlers and accumulated records, is compared with the first assessment of the virgin stocks conducted in the 1950s. This has enabled the effects of the long term on this tropical multispecies fishery to be assessed. In addition to the changes in the species composition, the estimation of growth and mortality from both time periods have allowed the population characteristics of the most common dermersal species to be compared.
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- 2006
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13. A new genus and species of deep demersal fish (Teleostei: Stephanoberycidae) from the tropical eastern North Atlantic
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Nigel R. Merrett and Jon A. Moore
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Abyssal zone ,Teleostei ,Demersal fish ,Gibberichthys ,biology ,Osteology ,Ecology ,Genus ,Taxonomy (biology) ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Dorsal fin - Abstract
A novel stephanoberycid genus and species, Abyssoberyx levisquamosus Merrett & Moore is reported from bottom-trawl abyssal captures in 4490-4640 m depth. It has cycloid scales, differing from Stephanoberyx, Acanthochaenus and Hispidoberyx with spinoid scales; has 1-2 dorsal fin spines, differing from Acanthochaenus and Malacosarcus with 0, Gibberichthys with 5-6 and Hispidoberyx with 3-5 spines; has 5-7 + 14-15 gill rakers, differing from Stephanoberyx with 12-15 + 25-27 and Acanthochaenus and Malacosarcus with 8 + 17-20 gill rakers. Selected aspects of the osteology of A. levisquamosus are described, to confirm that it shares several features in common with other stephanoberycid genera and allied stephanoberycoids. Aspects of its biology and ecology are discussed.
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- 2005
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14. Evidence for secondary planktonic transport of post-larvae of seagrass-associated King George whiting
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Jeremy S. Hindell, Sean M. Moran, Michael J. Keough, and Gregory P. Jenkins
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musculoskeletal diseases ,biology ,Ecology ,fungi ,Aquatic Science ,Plankton ,biology.organism_classification ,Whiting ,Demersal fish ,Seagrass ,Benthic zone ,Biological dispersal ,Bay ,Diel vertical migration ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Stomach contents and stable isotope analyses were used to determine if secondary planktonic dispersal of King George whiting Sillaginodes punctata post-larvae from shallow inshore habitats in a large embayment in south-eastern Australia was initiated by wave disturbance. Benthic harpacticoid copepods, which live in and amongst seagrass shoots, were found in the stomachs of S. punctata caught offshore in the plankton only during rough weather. Stable isotope analyses showed that the base of nutritional support, estimated from values of δ 13 C, of S. punctata collected in the plankton changed significantly during rough (waves >0.25 m) compared to calm (waves < 0.25 m) weather conditions. Values of δ 13 C collected from S. punctata in the plankton during rough weather were more consistent with S. punctata values found in the seagrass. Sillaginodes punctata collected in the plankton and seagrass during rough and calm weather failed to show differences in δ 15 N values. Dietary and isotope analyses support a model whereby newly arrived S. punctata larvae can be resuspended from seagrass beds and dispersed offshore by wave action during onshore winds. Secondary planktonic dispersal in S. punctata would provide a mechanism by which seagrass beds further inside Port Phillip Bay are colonized.
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- 2004
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15. Ecological relevance of temporal stability in regional fish catches
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Stuart I. Rogers, Melanie Bergmann, M. J. Armstrong, Michel J. Kaiser, and Hilmar Hinz
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biology ,Ecology ,Haddock ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Whiting ,Fishery ,Merlangius merlangus ,Demersal fish ,Flatfish ,Lemon sole ,Gadus ,Groundfish ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
In recent years, there has been an increasing interest in the protection of sea bed habitats that are important for commercially exploited fish species ('Essential Fish Habitats', EFH) and may be vulnerable to anthropogenic activities such as bottom fishing or aggregate extraction. Locating such habitats in the vast space of the sea, however, is difficult. The concept of habitat selection based on 'Ideal free distribution' theory suggests that areas of high suitability may attract larger quantities of fish than less suitable or unsuitable areas. Here, we used catch data from groundfish surveys to identify areas of consistently high densities of whiting (Merlangius merlangus), cod (Gadus morhua), haddock (Melanogrammus aeglefinus), in the Irish Sea and plaice (Pleuronectes platessa), sole (Solea solea), lemon sole (Microstomus kitt) in the English Channel over a period of 9 and 10 years respectively.A method was developed to identify areas of the seabed that may constitute EFHs and may therefore merit further investigations. In addition, the number of potential EFHs identified and the number of stations where no fish were caught gave an indication of the site specificity of the fish species analysed. For the gadoids, whiting was found to be less site specific than cod and haddock, while for the flatfish plaice and sole were less site specific then lemon sole. Our findings are discussed in the context of previously published studies on dietary specialism. The site specificity of demersal fish has implications for the siting process for marine protected areas as fish species with a strong habitat affinity can be expected to benefit more from such management schemes.
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- 2003
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16. The mysid-feeding guild of demersal fishes in the brackish zone of the Westerschelde estuary
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Jan Mees and Kristian Hostens
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Trisopterus luscus ,Neomysis integer ,Population dynamics ,Prey selection ,Biological sampling ,Predation ,Eurytemora affinis ,Aquatic Science ,Demersal fisheries ,Pleuronectes platessa [Plaice] ,Demersal zone ,Pomatoschistus ,Demersal fish ,Merlangius merlangus ,Neomysis integer (Leach, 1814) [An opossum shrimp] ,Flatfish ,Trigla lucerna Linnaeus, 1758 ,Gastrosaccus spinifer (Goës, 1864) ,Clupea harengus ,Mesopodopsis slabberi (Van Beneden, 1861) ,Pomatoschistus lozanoi (de Buen, 1923) [Lozano's goby] ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Pleuronectes flesus (Linnaeus, 1758) [Flounder] ,Pleuronectes ,ANE, Netherlands, Westerschelde ,Brackishwater fish ,biology ,Feeding ,biology.organism_classification ,Temora longicornis (Müller, 1792) ,Merlangius merlangus [Whiting] ,Fishery ,Feeding behaviour ,ANE, Netherlands, Zeeland ,Pomatoschistus minutus (Pallas, 1770) [Sand goby] ,Estuaries ,Trisopterus luscus (Linnaeus, 1758) - Abstract
The demersal fish fauna of the mesohaline zone of the Westerschelde estuary (south-west Netherlands) was sampled intensively in the period 1990-1992. Almost 500 beam trawl samples were taken in both subtidal (330 samples) and intertidal (144 samples) habitats. These yielded 44 fish species, mostly as juveniles. The area functioned as a nursery for several demersal fish species, and harboured large populations of hyperbenthic mysids. Three gobies, three flatfish, one clupeoid and one gadoid dominated the fish fauna, while three mysid species were important components of the holohyperbenthos. From c. 1500 stomach contents of 25 fish species, 44 prey species were identified, the most abundant of which were also common in the hyperbenthal. The demersal fish community consisted of a group that foraged subtidally on fast-moving epi- and hyperbenthic prey (for example gadoids, gobies and clupeoids) and a group that foraged on slow-moving or sessile endobenthic organisms, mainly in intertidal areas (for example most flatfish species). Mysidacea occurred in >50% stomachs analysed and were taken as prey by 19 of the 25 fish species. Mysids were most important in the diets of Pomatoschistus minutus, P. lozanoi, Trisopterus luscus and Merlangius merlangus, and were present in appreciable numbers in Pleuronectes flesus, Trigla lucerna, Clupea harengus and Pleuronectes platessa. These species fed mainly on the brackish water endemic Neomysis integer. Mesopodopsis slabberi (present in 35% of the gobiid stomachs) and Gastrosaccus spinifer (present in 25% of the gadoid stomachs) were of secondary importance. P. minutus and T. luscus showed a diet shift from calanoids (Eurytemora affinis and Temora longicornis) to mysids at Ls of 30 and 50 mm, respectively. Only 1% of the standing stocks of the N. integer and M. slabberi populations was removed by the local demersal fish community, so top-down control of mysid populations in estuaries seems unlikely.
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- 1999
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17. Aspects of the biology of Nezumia aequalis from the continental slope west of the British Isles
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John D M Gordon, Nigel R. Merrett, and Roger Coggan
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geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,biology ,Ecology ,Continental shelf ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Population biology ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Fecundity ,Demersal fish ,Animal science ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Abundance (ecology) ,Deep sea fish ,medicine ,Reproduction ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Otolith ,media_common - Abstract
Nezumia aequalis is one of the most abundant fishes on the upper and middle continental slopes (500–1750 m depth zones) of the North-east Atlantic with a peak abundance of three to four individuals 1000 m−2 swept area in the 750-m zone. Mean and modal size increased with depth, fish from the Rockall Trough (RT) being larger than those at equivalent depths in the Porcupine Seabight (PSB). Sex ratios were close to parity in all depth zones. Females grew larger than males. Head length to total length and to total weight did not differ significantly between sexes but RT fish were heavier at any given length than PSB fish. Serial batch spawning occurred over the first three quarters of the year. Ovaries contained five size groups of eggs, the three largest groups being vitelline and contributing 27% of the absolute individual fecundity which was positively correlated with body size and ranged from 9109 to 26 847. Age determined from sagittal otoliths ranged from 1 to 10 years, the ageing method being validated by a time-series study of the growing edge of otoliths. The von Bertalanffy growth parameter (k) was estimated at 0·175 and 0·216 from head length and otolith length, respectively.
- Published
- 1999
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18. Scavenging on discarded saury by demersal fishes off Sendai Bay, northern Japan
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Orio Yamamura
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,biology ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,Pacific cod ,Aquatic Science ,Gadidae ,biology.organism_classification ,Saury ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Bottom trawling ,Demersal zone ,Fishery ,Demersal fish ,Pacific saury ,Gadus ,14. Life underwater ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Pacific saury Cololabis saira were found in 24 out of 1314 stomachs of demersal fishes collected by bottom trawling at 245–393 m depths. The same area was occupied by the stick-held dipnet fishery for saury, in which a landing limitation was enforced to avoid overfishing. The fish species containing saury were: Pacific cod Gadus macrocephalus, walleye pollock Theragra chalcogramma, and oilfish Ruvettus pretiosus. These demersal species would not encounter living saury naturally, which normally are distributed above thermoclines. The ingested saury were smaller than market size which suggests that the saury from fish stomachs were discarded by fishermen because of small sizes to maximize profits under the landing limitation. The scavenged saury made up 41.5, 24.6 and 77.7% of the diets of large-sized (>30cm)Pacific cod, walleye pollock and oilfish, respectively in terms of DW composition. The extent to which discarded saury contributed to the total diet in the demersal fish assemblage, calculated by considering species composition and diets of bottom fishes, was 21.8% of the total diet. The discarded saury seemed to compensate the less productive feeding environment during autumn for the bottom fishes.
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. The foraging ecology of two pairs of congeneric demersal fish species: importance of morphological characteristics in prey selection
- Author
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A. Eleftheriou and M. Labropoulou
- Subjects
Sympatry ,Mullus barbatus ,Mullus surmuletus ,biology ,Ecology ,Zoology ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Serranus ,Hepatus ,Predation ,Demersal fish ,Mullus ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The feeding habits of two sympatric species pairs of demersal fish (Mullus barbatus-Mullus surmuletus, Serranus cabrilla-Serranus hepatus) which occupy the shallow coastal area (25–30 m) in Iraklion Bay were investigated from samples collected on a monthly basis (August 1990 to August 1992). Stomach content analyses revealed that all of them were carnivores, feeding mainly on benthic invertebrates, and that each species consumed a narrow range of prey species with no significant dietary overlap. The morphology of their feeding apparatus was compared to examine the effect of any morphological differences on food selection and resource partitioning between the fish species. The species could be distinguished on the basis of the size of their mouth gape, the number of gill rakers and the length of their intestine. This study shows that each species pair follows a different strategy segregating along food niche dimensions. In particular, M. barbatus and M. surmuletus segregate their feeding niche consuming different prey taxa with similar sizes whereas S. cabrilla and S. hepatus differ considerably with respect to the degree to which prey species contribute to their diets coupled with differences in mean prey sizes.
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. A comparison of the deep-water demersal fish assemblages of the Rockall Trough and Porcupine Seabight, eastern North Atlantic: continental slope to rise
- Author
-
John D M Gordon, Nigel R. Merrett, Odd Aksel Bergstad, and Sarah Swan
- Subjects
geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Continental shelf ,Fauna ,Aquatic Science ,Biology ,Spatial distribution ,biology.organism_classification ,Bathyal zone ,Fishery ,Demersal fish ,Abundance (ecology) ,biology.animal ,Trough (meteorology) ,Porcupine ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Fishery surveys of the continental slope to the west of the British Isles have shown quite marked differences between areas in both the proportion and abundance of marketable or potentially marketable species. In general, the northern slopes lying to the west of Scotland were considered to have a greater potential for exploitation than the southern slopes off Ireland. Subsequent detailed studies of a northern (Rockall Trough) and a southern slope area (Porcupine Seabight) sampled the demersal fish fauna using a Granton trawl fished on paired warps to depths of 1200 m, and a semi-balloon trawl fished on a single warp to depths of about 3000 m. The Granton trawl catches differed significantly between the two areas, especially at the greatest depths fished. The semi-balloon trawl catches did not differ between the areas. This slower trawl was poor at catching large, mobile species and efficient in the capture of the deep-waler eel Synaphobranchus kaupi. This eel was numerically dominant over the mid to lower slope and probably accounts for much of the similarity between areas at these depths.
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Lilliputian bottom fish fauna of the Hatteras upper middle continental slope
- Author
-
Steve W. Ross and K. J. Sulak
- Subjects
geography ,Bottom feeder ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,biology ,Ecology ,Continental shelf ,Fauna ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Bathyal zone ,Demersal fish ,Benthic zone ,Deep sea fish ,Benthic boundary layer ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Submersible data from two areas along the Carolina-Virginia continental slope reveal a Hatteras upper middle slope (HMS) (35.30’N, 74.50’W) demersal fish fauna remarkable for diminutive size of individuals within and across species, a fauna which is accordingly termed ‘Lilliputian’. Contrast of HMS submersible data with Virginia trawl and submersible data support this finding. The four top-ranking HMS fishes, Lycenchelys verrillii, Glyptocephalus cynoglossus, Myxine glutinosa and Nezumia bairdii, are all significantly smaller than on the Virginia upper middle slope. Also peculiar to the HMS is the dominance of sedentary benthic species, rarity of active benthopelagic foragers, and markedly elevated fish population density. Species composition of the HMS fauna differs from that of the general Middle Atlantic Bight fauna; notably absent are species of otherwise continuous distribution along the U.S. East Coast (e.g. Synaphobranchus affinis, Nezumia aequalis). Since HMS megafaunal and macrofaunal invertebrate communities are also anomalous, the Lilliputian phenomenon among HMS bottom fishes provides a characteristic biotic signature of a pervasively re-structured benthic boundary layer community. The authors hypothesize that the HMS faunal anomaly reflects a limiting factor, episodic sediment surface hypoxia, peculiar to this region of high particulate organic carbon flux from surface waters. Results indicate that substantial changes in fish faunal composition and structure can occur on a small geographic scale on the open soft-Substrate continental slope.
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Sealworm (Pseudoterranova decipiens) transmission to fish trawled from Hvaler, Oslofjord, Norway
- Author
-
K. Andersen and S. Clers
- Subjects
Pleuronectes ,Fishery ,Demersal fish ,biology ,Phocine distemper virus ,Hippoglossoides ,Gadus ,Limanda ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Pseudoterranova decipiens ,Phoca ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Demersal fish were sampled over 3 years to describe sealworm Pseudoterranova decipiens infection levels in relation to the size of a local colony of common seals Phoca vitulina in Hvaler, Oslofjord, Norway. More than 2000 fish were examined for worms, and five fish species were found to be infected, cod Gadus morhua, four-bearded rockling Enchelyopus cimbrius, plaice Pleuronectes platessa, long rough dab Hippoglossoides platessoides and dab Limanda limanda. A detailed analysis of worm accumulation in cod, the only infected species present in large enough numbers, shows a net decrease in worm transmission following the phocine distemper virus epizootic which killed two-thirds of the seals in Hvaler in 1988.
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Annotated list of demersal fishes occurring at Sedlo Seamount, Azores north-east central Atlantic Ocean
- Author
-
Filipe M. Porteiro, Gui M. Menezes, A. Rosa, and Octávio Melo
- Subjects
geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Biogeography ,Fauna ,Seamount ,Biodiversity ,Fishes ,Sampling (statistics) ,Aquatic Science ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Demersal zone ,Fishery ,Demersal fish ,Archipelago ,Animals ,Atlantic Ocean ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Azores - Abstract
Several fish surveys were carried out in recent years at Sedlo Seamount, Azores, north-eastern central Atlantic Ocean. An objective of the surveys was to determine the species composition of the demersal fish species living in the area. Four types of sampling gears (bottom trawl and three types of longline) were used at Sedlo Seamount resulting in very different species composition by gear and a very complete coverage of the fish fauna of the area. A list of fishes caught with these sampling methods is presented, along with other specific auxiliary information. Altogether 78 species from 43 families were listed for Sedlo Seamount, and as far as is known, 15 species were recorded for the first time for Azorean waters.
- Published
- 2012
24. Temporal and spatial variation in the species composition of trawl samples from a demersal fish community
- Author
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O. A. Bergstad and O. T. Albert
- Subjects
Fishery ,Demersal fish ,Water column ,biology ,Diurnal temperature variation ,Trisopterus ,Spatial variability ,Sebastes ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Viviparus ,Diel vertical migration ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The temporal variation in species and size structure of the demersal fish community of a 70–150m deep open coastal locality of SW Norway was studied by multivariate analysis of bottom trawl data both from surveys and from fixed locations sampled repeatedly through 48-h periods. The trawl data were related to echo recordings from individual tows made during the 48-h experiments, Between-site variation was greater than short-term variation at single sites. Short-term variation was largely cyclical, diel variation, involving several species. Catches of the numerically dominating species, Sebastes viviparus and Trisopterus esmarki, did not follow any diel patterns. Acoustical recordings suggested that these species undertook diel vertical migrations largely within the lower 5 m of the water column. This corresponds to the vertical opening of the trawl.
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Analysis of the demersal community of fish and cephalopods on the Agulhas Bank, South Africa
- Author
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A. Badenhorst, M. J. Smale, J. G. Field, and B. A. Roel
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,biology ,Trawling ,Continental shelf ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,Dendrogram ,010607 zoology ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,01 natural sciences ,Demersal zone ,Cephalopod ,Fishery ,Demersal fish ,Cape ,%22">Fish ,14. Life underwater ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The demersal fish and cephalopod communities of the continental shelf and upper slope from 17 to 395m deep were studied during five annual cruises between Cape Agulhas and Port Alfred, South Africa. The cruises showed a consistent pattern of an inshore community (200m). These groups were identified by dendrograms and multidimensional scaling cluster analysis, which supported on‐board observations of catch variation with depth. Although the boundaries are not clearly defined, examination of physical features at the clustered stations suggests that depth, temperature and, to a lesser extent, oxygen concentration are important in the grouping. Occasional, apparently anomalous associations of inshore stations suggested that water temperature and oxygen may over‐ride the normal depth distributions of the species groups. This intimates that patterns offish and cephalopod distribution may be dynamic and in part related to the physical parameters of the water body.
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Food habits, ontogenetic diet shift and selectivity in Zeus faber Linnaeus, 1758
- Author
-
H. Fourtouni and Konstantinos I. Stergiou
- Subjects
Demersal fish ,biology ,Callionymus ,Ecology ,Interspecific competition ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Zooplankton ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Intraspecific competition ,Predation ,Gaidropsarus ,Cepola macrophthalma - Abstract
The feeding habits of Zeus faber Linnaeus, 1758 were studied by examining digestive tracts in I2 size classes of individuals. It is a stenophagus species which begins life feeding almost exclusively on zooplankton until it is about 80 mm long, then switches gradually from zooplankton to small demersal fish, and finally when > 140 mm switches to feeding exclusively on benthic and demersal fish. Mysids were the most important food component in Z.faber 140mm. The switch to fish prey was followed by a greater body weight per unit length. Z.faber > 140 mm selected primarily for small-and intermediate-sized C. macrophthalma (and to a lesser extent for Callionymus maculatus Rafinesque-Schmaltz, 1810, Gaidropsarus sp. and Trigla Iyra Linnaeus, 1758). Our results suggested that the ratio of vertical to horizontal dimension of prey, the motion and coloration of prey as well as the visual capabilities and perceptual potentialities of Z. faber may all in a synergetic fashion account for prey type and size selection and the positive relations found between the size of Z.faber and the size and variance of its ingested prey. Possible co-evolutionary relationships between Z.faber and C. macrophthalma are also discussed.
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Individual-based models of cod movement and population dynamics
- Author
-
H. J. Edwards
- Subjects
education.field_of_study ,biology ,Movement (music) ,Ecology ,Ecology (disciplines) ,Population ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Fish stock ,Fishery ,Demersal fish ,Individual based ,Electronic data ,Fisheries management ,education ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Many fish species undergo seasonal changes in distribution, as a result of horizontal migrations between feeding, nursery and spawning grounds. Exploring the processes involved in these movements may be the key to understanding interactions with other species, man and the environment, and is therefore crucial to effective fisheries management. Recent tagging experiments providing information on the distribution of migratory fish stocks have indicated pronounced regional and temporal differences in the migratory behaviour of cod, suggesting complex interactions between this commercially important fish species and the environment. This paper presents a model of the horizontal movements of demersal fish, principally cod, using an individual-based modelling approach to explore and predict the relationship between demersal fish movements and key environmental and ecological factors. The model simulates the basic biological processes of growth, movement and mortality, and is driven by the analysis of physical tagging data recorded by electronic data storage tags (DSTs). Results show that the incorporation of behavioural data from DSTs into spatially explicit individual-based models can provide realistic simulations of large-scale fish stocks, thus giving a better understanding of their basic ecology and allowing more effective management of commercially important fish species. Possibilities of future improvements and extensions to the model are discussed.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Availability, morphometrics, feeding and breeding activity in a multi-species, demersal fish stock of the Western Indian Ocean
- Author
-
Ann Darracott
- Subjects
Fishery ,Sexual dimorphism ,Morphometrics ,Demersal fish ,biology ,Common species ,Carcharhinus sealei ,Dasyatis ,Aquatic Science ,Rhynchobatus ,biology.organism_classification ,Crustacean ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
A multi-species demersal fish stock was studied from April 1969 to July 1970. The common species are described in this paper and consist of Carcharhinus sealei, Rhynchobatus djeddensis, Dasyatis kuhlii, Rachycentron canadum, Psettodes erumei and Arius sp. With the exception of Rachycentron canadum, these fish were available throughout the year and some coincidence of increased availability was noted in August/September. Psettodes erumei, the commonest fish caught, was most available in August/September, February/ March and June. The size and weight distribution of each of these fish is described. Morphometric results indicate that two fish, Dasyatis kuhlii and Psettodes erumei, exhibit sexual dimorphism, the females being larger and heavier than the males. Carcharhinus sealei, Rhynchobatus djeddensis and Rachycentron canadum have a nearly isometric growth exponent whereas Dasyatis kuhlii, Psettodes erumei and Arius sp. have an allometric growth exponent. All fish were carnivores, Rhynchobatus djeddensis, Rachycentron canadum and Arius sp. being primarily crustacean feeders, Dasyatis kuhlii feeding on polychaetes and crustaceans and Carcharhinus sealei and Psettodes erumei feeding mainly on fish. The increased number of all three bony fish noted in August/September (immediately prior to the short rains in October/November) is discussed in relation to feeding activity and the initiation of spawning activity. It is suggested that spawning in Psettodes erumei and Arius sp. is initiated in September, continuing possibly to February and then during the long rains (March/May) and the South East Monsoon the fish recover. It is also suggested that pregnant elasmobranchs may come inshore in greater numbers during the rains to give birth.
- Published
- 1977
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Incidence of parasitic worms in stomachs of pelagic and demersal fish of the Rockall Trough, northeastern Atlantic Ocean
- Author
-
J. D. M. Gordon and J. Mauchline
- Subjects
Larva ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Pelagic zone ,Aquatic Science ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,biology.organism_classification ,Demersal zone ,Fishery ,Demersal fish ,parasitic diseases ,Infestation ,medicine ,Helminths ,Trough (meteorology) ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The incidence of gyrocotyllid worms in chimaeroids and cestode larvae and nematodes in the stomachs of some 13 600 demersal and pelagic fish from the Rockall Trough, northeastern Atlantic is determined. The observations were made in conjunction with a detailed study of the diets of the fish which belonged to 117 species. No dietary sources of the infections could be identified with certainty. Pelagically caught fish, from between the surface and 2500 m depth, had no helminth infestation of their stomachs. Infestations of demersal fish were more pronounced between 1500 and 2900 m than between 500 and 1250 m depth.
- Published
- 1984
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Occurrence of stones, sediment and fish scales in stomach contents of demersal fish of the Rockall Trough
- Author
-
J. Mauchline and J. D. M. Gordon
- Subjects
Fishery ,Demersal fish ,Meiobenthos ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Trough (geology) ,Bathymetry ,Aquatic Science ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Demersal zone ,Predation - Abstract
The occurrence of stones, sediment and fish scales was determined among the stomach contents of some 5000 fish. These fish comprised representatives of more than 70 different demersal species, sampled at 250 m bathymetric intervals, from the Rockall Trough, northeastern Atlantic Ocean, at depths ranging from 500 to 2900 m. Stones only occurred in stomachs of fish caught at 500–1000 m depth, their incidence in stomachs with food present being 4.6% at 500m, 1.1% at 750 m and 1.3% at 1000m depth. Sediment occurred in 9%, fish scales in 7%, of stomachs with contents. Sediment and scales co-occurred in the stomachs of primarily benthopelagic feeding fish. The sediment, however, was associated with the less dominant epibenthic components of the diets while the scales occurred with the more common benthopelagic components. The co-occurrence of sediment, scales and benthopelagic prey may arise through the former items having longer residence times in the stomachs than, for example, epibenthic prey. There is no evidence of increased occurrence of sediment (and its associated meiofauna) in the diets of fish on the lower slope at depths of 1500–2900 m in the Rockall Trough.
- Published
- 1984
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Trophic diversity in deep-sea fish
- Author
-
J. D. M. Gordon and J. Mauchline
- Subjects
biology ,Ecology ,Pelagic zone ,Maurolicus ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Demersal zone ,Bathyal zone ,Demersal fish ,Benthic zone ,Deep sea fish ,human activities ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Trophic level - Abstract
The general composition and diversity of the diets of the 43 most commonly caught pelagic and demersal fish of the Rockall Trough, north-eastern Atlantic Ocean, are assessed. The fish are divided into three Groups. The 8 species in Group I consist of both pelagic and demersal species feeding on relatively few prey-classes and having a diet of low diversity and few items per meal. Group II contains 22 pelagic and demersal species with more diverse diets, less restricted dietary composition, but still consuming relatively few items per meal. Group III is the 12 demersal macrourid species with the most diverse diets, a variable dietary composition and the greatest mean number of items per meal. One species, Maurolicus muelleri, had too many unidentified components in its diet to allow classification in terms of Groups I, II or III. All diets contained dominant items, the diversity within diets offish in Groups II and III arising from the inclusion of subdominants and rare items. The diets of species in Groups I and II can be defined in terms of ecological constitution, trophic diversity and prey-species composition. Those of the Group III macrourids differ in that their definition is liable to be a compromise between the situation where ecological constitution and trophic diversity are adequately defined but not species composition.
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Growth, mortality, age composition and fisheries yields of fish from the Gulf of Aden
- Author
-
S. Shaher, A. Bakhader, and R. R. C. Edwards
- Subjects
Fishery ,Demersal fish ,biology ,Trawling ,Range (biology) ,Fishing ,%22">Fish ,Age composition ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Von bertalanffy ,Sustainable yield ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Tropical fish were collected by trawling in Yemeni waters. Age determinations were made on sections of vertebrae which were cross checked with scales. The values for the von Bertalanffy growth constants K were in the range 0.08–0.31. Total mortalities (Z) calculated from age compositions were in the range 0.31 to 0.67 for 11 species. The mean of 0.46 agreed closely with that derived from the formula of Pauly (1980a) of 0.45. Since the former included fishing mortality (F) in addition to natural mortality (M) it was suggested that a lower value be used in the Gulland (1968) yield formula: Y = 0.5 M Bo. Recruitment to the fishery for most species occurred by 3 years of age. The demersal fish stocks in Yemeni waters may not exceed 109×103 tonnes at the present time. Using a value for M of 0.3, the annual sustainable yield may be in the region of 16×103 tonnes.
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Beam trawl surveys as a monitoring tool in polluted estuaries in north-east England
- Author
-
J. R. Pomfret, G. S. Turner, and S. Phillips
- Subjects
Pollution ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Sampling (statistics) ,Estuary ,North east ,Aquatic Science ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Fishery ,Survey methodology ,Demersal fish ,Water quality ,Monitoring tool ,human activities ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,media_common - Abstract
Surveys of demersal fish and epibenthos in the Tyne, Wear and Tees estuaries, begun in 1981 as part of a wider sampling programme to assess the effects of pollution and its reduction by various control measures, are discussed. Available survey methods are reviewed and the development of a survey protocol is described. A preliminary assessment of the data identified differences between the estuaries and the distribution of major species in the Tyne, and provides evidence of long-term water quality improvements.
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Growth rates of Lutjanidae (snappers) in tropical Australian waters
- Author
-
R. R. C. Edwards
- Subjects
Fishery ,Demersal fish ,Pristipomoides typus ,Fresh weight ,Lutjanidae ,Pristipomoides multidens ,Lutjanus malabaricus ,Aquatic Science ,Biology ,Von bertalanffy ,biology.organism_classification ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Growth rates of three commercial species of Lutjanidae were estimated from sections of vertebrae cross-checked with scales. The von Bertalanffy growth constants for Lutjanus malabaricus were K=0.168, L∞=70.7 cm standard length (S.L.). For Pristipomoides multidens these were K= 0.219, L∞= 59.1cm, and for Pristipomoides typus K=0.254, L∞= 51.5 cm. Length/weight was analysed in the form W= aLb where W was fresh weight (g) and L= S.L. (cm). The constants were: L. malabaricus, a= 0.041, b= 2.842; P. multidens, a=0.032, b= 2.897; P. typus, a= 0.038, b= 2.822. The growth rates were considered low in comparison with demersal fish counterparts from temperate seas.
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Feeding relationships of a demersal fish assemblage on the west coast of Scotland
- Author
-
I. A. Ezzi and R. N. Gibson
- Subjects
Fishery ,Demersal fish ,Feeding types ,biology ,Benthic zone ,Lesueurigobius friesii ,Assemblage (archaeology) ,West coast ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Demersal zone ,Predation - Abstract
The feeding relationships of an assemblage of demersal fishes present on a soft-sediment bottom off the west coast of Scotland in the late summer-autumn were investigated. On the basis of stomach content analyses of the fifteen commonest species, three major feeding types could be distinguished. The first consisted of small browsing species feeding predominantly on infaunal polychaetes. The second relied heavily on caridean decapods, but within this group three subgroups could be detected which supplemented their diet with amphipods, mysids or polychaetes, respectively. The third group fed on large prey consisting of mysids and/or fish. Several species passed from one group to another as they grew, and there was a general tendency for fish to become more specialized in their diet with increasing size. The three groups represent a series in which decreasing reliance is placed on the substratum as a source of food.
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. A sterile sea water circulating system for the jar culture of developing fish eggs
- Author
-
Susan E. Shackley and P. E. King
- Subjects
Blennius pholis ,computer.file_format ,Aquatic Science ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Filter (aquarium) ,Fishery ,Demersal fish ,JAR ,embryonic structures ,%22">Fish ,Seawater ,computer ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
A sterile sea water circulating system for the jar culture of developing fish eggs is described. An ultra–violet filter unit is used to sterilise the water and the system is one of a double-circulation the advantages of which are discussed. This is an effective method for maintaining the developing embryos of Blennius pholis L. under controlled conditions, and would be applicable to studies on other demersal fish species or marine organisms.
- Published
- 1978
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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