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Structure and distribution of the slope fish community in the vicinity of the sub-Antarctic Prince Edward Archipelago

Authors :
T. Bushula
R. W. Leslie
Evgeny A. Pakhomov
S. Kaehler
B. P. Watkins
Source :
Journal of Fish Biology. 68:1834-1866
Publication Year :
2006
Publisher :
Wiley, 2006.

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.

Details

ISSN :
10958649 and 00221112
Volume :
68
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Fish Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........e10124046fe2077b965cd0478b978730
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1095-8649.2006.01076.x