Effect of diet composition and temperature on the gastric evacuation rate of European sardine: implication for egg predation estimates

Author:

Fonseca P1,Barata M2,Castanho S2,Pousão-Ferreira P2,Garrido S13

Affiliation:

1. Portuguese Institute for the Ocean and Atmosphere (IPMA), Rua Alfredo Magalhães Ramalho, 6, 1495-006 Lisbon, Portugal

2. IPMA, EPPO—Aquaculture Research Station, Av. Parque Natural da Ria Formosa s/n, 8700-194 Olhão, Portugal

3. MARE—Marine and Environmental Sciences Centre Faculdade de Ciências, Universidade de Lisboa Campo Grande, 1749-016 Lisbon, Portugal

Abstract

Cannibalism and intraguild predation of fish eggs are frequently observed for small and medium pelagic fish and can be an important cause of natural mortality. The European sardine Sardina pilchardus is the major predator of pelagic fish eggs in Atlantic Iberian waters. Estimates of egg mortality due to predation rely on a number of parameters that are frequently unknown for most species, such as gastric evacuation rate (GER) and feeding periodicity, and rates obtained for other fish species are generally used. These assumptions can severely affect egg mortality estimates. We conducted laboratory experiments to estimate the GER of European sardine that were fed diets composed of different proportions of fish eggs and other food types, such as Artemia franciscana nauplii, Brachionus plicatilis and microalgae, at different temperatures experienced by sardine in the wild (15, 17 and 21°C). Temperature, predator size and sex did not influence the gastric rates. Prey type significantly affected the GER of sardines, with slower evacuation when offered diets containing a higher concentration of fish eggs rather than microalgae, rotifers and Artemia nauplii. Fish eggs are more nutritionally rich compared to microalgae, rotifers and Artemia nauplii, and therefore more difficult to digest. GERs obtained here for S. pilchardus were similar to those obtained for Sardinops sagax in South Africa. This study provides important information that allows for improving estimates of daily feeding rates and egg mortality by predation, thus increasing our understanding of small pelagic fish population dynamics.

Publisher

Inter-Research Science Center

Subject

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

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