Abstract
Patterns of piscivory were investigated among five abundant species of
predatory fish at One Tree Reef, Great Barrier Reef, Australia. The guts of
two lutjanids Lutjanus carponotatus and
Lutjanus fulviflamma, two labrids
Cheilinus diagrammus and
Thalassoma lunare, and a serranid
Epinephelus quoyanus were examined for type, length,
number and volume of prey at two times of the day: sunrise and sunset. Each of
these species consumed fish, but only T. lunare and the
two lutjanids consumed recruit-sized fish. This information is important
because there is often scepticism as to whether large predators (>200 mm
TL) such as lutjanids consume new recruits. Only in the lutjanids were there
differences in the number and volume of prey present in the gut at sunrise and
at sunset; at sunset, few lutjanid specimens contained prey, whereas at
sunrise 98% of specimens contained prey. This result, in conjunction
with studies of nocturnal activity, suggest that patterns of predation
pressure inferred from daylight observations of predator abundance may have
little relevance to actual patterns of predation at local scales.
Subject
Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography
Cited by
61 articles.
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