Diets and Stable Isotope Derived Food Web Structure of Fishes from the Inshore Gulf of Maine

In the nearshore Gulf of Maine, a combination of factors (overfishing, ecosystem change, and ocean warming) is thought to govern groundfish recovery. We analyzed feeding habits of demersal predatory fish from Midcoast Maine (abundant river herring) and Passamaquoddy Bay (low river herring) in easter...

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Main Authors: Willis, Theodore V, Wilson, Karen A, Johnson, Beverly J
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: SCARAB 2017
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Online Access:https://scarab.bates.edu/faculty_publications/33
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spelling ftbatescollege:oai:scarab.bates.edu:faculty_publications-1036 2023-05-15T15:27:41+02:00 Diets and Stable Isotope Derived Food Web Structure of Fishes from the Inshore Gulf of Maine Willis, Theodore V Wilson, Karen A Johnson, Beverly J 2017-01-01T08:00:00Z https://scarab.bates.edu/faculty_publications/33 unknown SCARAB https://scarab.bates.edu/faculty_publications/33 All Faculty Scholarship text 2017 ftbatescollege 2022-03-22T09:19:39Z In the nearshore Gulf of Maine, a combination of factors (overfishing, ecosystem change, and ocean warming) is thought to govern groundfish recovery. We analyzed feeding habits of demersal predatory fish from Midcoast Maine (abundant river herring) and Passamaquoddy Bay (low river herring) in eastern Maine, using stomach content and stable isotope analyses, to determine the prevalence of river herring (alewife, Alosa pseudoharengus, and blueback herring, A. aestivalis) in nearshore (<4.5 km) groundfish diets. Invertebrates dominated all predator diets at all sites. At Midcoast sites, catch-per-unit-effort (CPUE) of Atlantic cod was higher, and fish predators showed a strong seasonal pattern in river herring consumption compared to Passamaqouddy Bay. Cod, pollock (Pollachius virens), and sculpins (Myoxocephalus octodecimspinosus and M. scorpius) from Midcoast sites tended to be enriched in δ15N relative to Passamaquoddy Bay. Contrasting fast vs. slow turnover tissue (fin vs. muscle) indicated that focal species migrated or food availability changed seasonally and Atlantic mackerel (Scomber scombrus) in Passamaquoddy Bay were assimilating into a trophically depleted food web. We posit that lack of forage fish in Passamaquoddy Bay contributed to conditions that encourage an invertebrate based diet. River herring are also an order of magnitude less abundant in Passamaquoddy Bay than at Midcoast sites, limiting the availability of this seasonal food source. River restoration may contribute to recovery of groundfish stocks nearshore by increasing the availability of high lipid, seasonally available prey. Text atlantic cod Bates College: SCARAB (Scholarly Communication and Research at Bates)
institution Open Polar
collection Bates College: SCARAB (Scholarly Communication and Research at Bates)
op_collection_id ftbatescollege
language unknown
description In the nearshore Gulf of Maine, a combination of factors (overfishing, ecosystem change, and ocean warming) is thought to govern groundfish recovery. We analyzed feeding habits of demersal predatory fish from Midcoast Maine (abundant river herring) and Passamaquoddy Bay (low river herring) in eastern Maine, using stomach content and stable isotope analyses, to determine the prevalence of river herring (alewife, Alosa pseudoharengus, and blueback herring, A. aestivalis) in nearshore (<4.5 km) groundfish diets. Invertebrates dominated all predator diets at all sites. At Midcoast sites, catch-per-unit-effort (CPUE) of Atlantic cod was higher, and fish predators showed a strong seasonal pattern in river herring consumption compared to Passamaqouddy Bay. Cod, pollock (Pollachius virens), and sculpins (Myoxocephalus octodecimspinosus and M. scorpius) from Midcoast sites tended to be enriched in δ15N relative to Passamaquoddy Bay. Contrasting fast vs. slow turnover tissue (fin vs. muscle) indicated that focal species migrated or food availability changed seasonally and Atlantic mackerel (Scomber scombrus) in Passamaquoddy Bay were assimilating into a trophically depleted food web. We posit that lack of forage fish in Passamaquoddy Bay contributed to conditions that encourage an invertebrate based diet. River herring are also an order of magnitude less abundant in Passamaquoddy Bay than at Midcoast sites, limiting the availability of this seasonal food source. River restoration may contribute to recovery of groundfish stocks nearshore by increasing the availability of high lipid, seasonally available prey.
format Text
author Willis, Theodore V
Wilson, Karen A
Johnson, Beverly J
spellingShingle Willis, Theodore V
Wilson, Karen A
Johnson, Beverly J
Diets and Stable Isotope Derived Food Web Structure of Fishes from the Inshore Gulf of Maine
author_facet Willis, Theodore V
Wilson, Karen A
Johnson, Beverly J
author_sort Willis, Theodore V
title Diets and Stable Isotope Derived Food Web Structure of Fishes from the Inshore Gulf of Maine
title_short Diets and Stable Isotope Derived Food Web Structure of Fishes from the Inshore Gulf of Maine
title_full Diets and Stable Isotope Derived Food Web Structure of Fishes from the Inshore Gulf of Maine
title_fullStr Diets and Stable Isotope Derived Food Web Structure of Fishes from the Inshore Gulf of Maine
title_full_unstemmed Diets and Stable Isotope Derived Food Web Structure of Fishes from the Inshore Gulf of Maine
title_sort diets and stable isotope derived food web structure of fishes from the inshore gulf of maine
publisher SCARAB
publishDate 2017
url https://scarab.bates.edu/faculty_publications/33
genre atlantic cod
genre_facet atlantic cod
op_source All Faculty Scholarship
op_relation https://scarab.bates.edu/faculty_publications/33
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