Interannual variability of diet composition and prey preference of larval redfish (Sebastes spp.) in the Gulf of St. Lawrence

Author:

Burns Corinne M1ORCID,Lauzon Félix1,Plourde Stéphane2,Sirois Pascal3,Robert Dominique1

Affiliation:

1. CANADA RESEARCH CHAIR IN FISHERIES ECOLOGY, INSTITUT DES SCIENCES DE LA MER, UNIVERSITÉ DU QUÉBEC À RIMOUSKI, CP 3300, RIMOUSKI, QC G5L 3A1, CANADA

2. MAURICE LAMONTAGNE INSTITUTE, FISHERIES AND OCEANS CANADA, 850 ROUTE DE LA MER, MONT-JOLI, QC G5H 3Z4, CANADA

3. DÉPARTEMENT DES SCIENCES FONDAMENTALES, UNIVERSITÉ DU QUÉBEC À CHICOUTIMI, 555 BOULEVARD DE L’UNIVERSITÉ, CHICOUTIMI, QC G7H 2B1, Canada

Abstract

Abstract Spatiotemporal overlap between fish larvae and their planktonic prey is an important source of recruitment variability. Over the past decade, one species of redfish, Sebastes mentella, from the Gulf of St. Lawrence (GSL) produced multiple strong cohorts following decades of low recruitment, which has generated strong interest in identifying potential drivers of larval survival. The present study provides the first detailed, multi-year assessment of larval redfish (Sebastes spp.) trophodynamics. Interannual variability in larval redfish diet composition and prey selectivity was assessed using high-resolution prey identification of larval gut contents and in situ prey fields. Eggs from the calanoid copepod Calanus finmarchicus represented the most frequently consumed prey in 3 of the 4 collection years, and contributed the largest proportion of carbon ingested by redfish larvae in all years. The high consumption of C. finmarchicus eggs by larvae, combined with evidence of positive selection for this taxon in some years, supports the hypothesis of a strong trophic link between larval redfish and a key calanoid copepod in the GSL ecosystem. Our results indicate that future efforts investigating GSL redfish recruitment processes should consider environment-driven variability in the reproductive phenology and abundance of C. finmarchicus.

Funder

DFO

RAQ

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference57 articles.

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