Author:
Bulman C.,Althaus F.,He X.,Bax N. J.,Williams A.
Abstract
A total of 8200 stomach samples was collected from 102 fish species caught by
trawl or gillnet during research surveys on the south-eastern Australian shelf
from 1993 to 1996. Diet compositions were analysed based on percentages of wet
weight of prey. Of the total fish examined, 70 species had sufficient stomach
samples (i.e. >10) for further analysis. Ten trophic guilds were identified
from cluster analysis. Benthic prey dominated the diets. However, analysis on
a subset of 28 abundant species that were commercially and ecologically
important, showed that pelagic prey was dominant, particularly for 12 quota
species. This suggests that pelagic production contributes significantly to
the trawl fishery production. Further analysis on the diets of these 28
species found that although fish was more important than invertebrate prey,
there was no evidence of significant predation on commercially important
species (quota species)by other fish species. A food web diagram was
constructed, mostly based on the diet compositions, guild structure and
relative abundance of commercially and ecologically important fish species, to
show major trophic interactions of the shelf ecosystem.
Subject
Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography
Cited by
85 articles.
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