Habitat and trophic niche overlap among juvenile black sea bass, tautog, and cunner: interspecific interactions amid a species geographic range expansion

Author:

Taylor DL1,Pearson C1,Green-Gavrielidis L2,Hobbs NV34,Thornber C5,Cicchetti G6,Gerber-Williams A7,McManus MC7

Affiliation:

1. Department of Marine Biology, Roger Williams University, One Old Ferry Road, Bristol, RI 02809, USA

2. Department of Biology and Biomedical Sciences, Salve Regina University, 100 Ochre Point Avenue, Newport, RI 02840, USA

3. Department of Biology, Connecticut College, 270 Mohegan Avenue, New London, CT 06320, USA

4. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Rhode Island, 120 Lower College Road, Kingston, RI 02881, USA

5. Department of Natural Resources Science, University of Rhode Island, 120 Lower College Road, Kingston, RI 02881, USA

6. US Environmental Protection Agency, Atlantic Coastal Environmental Sciences Division, 27 Tarzwell Drive, Narragansett, RI 02882, USA

7. Division of Marine Fisheries, Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management, Fort Wetherill Marine Laboratory, 3 Fort Wetherill Drive, Jamestown, RI 02835, USA

Abstract

Juvenile black sea bass Centropristis striata populations are increasing in southern New England estuaries of the northeastern USA with possible trophodynamic effects on labrid species: tautog Tautoga onitis and cunner Tautogolabrus adspersus. In this study, we examined the abundance, size-structure, and feeding ecology of juvenile sea bass and labrids in Narragansett Bay (Rhode Island, USA) from June to October in 2018 and 2019 and evaluated potential interspecific competition using habitat, diet, and isotopic niche overlap indices. Juveniles (age-0+) of each fish species spatiotemporally co-occurred in shallow, polyhaline habitats throughout the estuary. Age-0 cohorts were numerically dominant across species and initially recruited to the study area in July (minimum total length, TL = 15-20 mm), reached peak abundances in mid- to late summer (maximum abundances = 12-140 fish 100 m-2), and emigrated from field sites in October (maximum TL = 85-96 mm). Stomach content and stable isotope (δ15N and δ13C) analyses determined that focal fishes were generalist carnivores that foraged in bentho-pelagic food webs. Fishes also overlapped in their respective ambit and core isotopic niche space, but interspecific dietary overlap was size-dependent. Dietary overlap was most pronounced between sea bass ≤49 mm TL and labrids ≤59 mm TL due to their mutual reliance on gammarid and caprellid amphipods. Ontogenetic dietary shifts then resulted in food niche segregation, such that sea bass 50-139 mm TL consumed decapod crustaceans and fish, whereas labrids 60-181 mm TL mainly fed on amphipods, worms, bivalves, and turf-associated biota, i.e. bryozoans, hydroids, and seaweeds. Habitat and trophic niche overlap between early juvenile sea bass and labrids purportedly have not caused opposite population trajectories or food resource limitation in Narragansett Bay, indicating an absence of exploitative competition. Alternatively, realized competition between species may be too spatiotemporally restricted to alter their population dynamics. Continuous monitoring of the sea bass’s bio-ecological effects in southern New England estuaries is warranted, however, given their recent range expansion and increasing abundances at northern latitudes.

Publisher

Inter-Research Science Center

Subject

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

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