Food of an endangered cyprinodont (Aphanius Iberus): Ontogenetic diet shift and prey electivity

We studied the ontogenetic diet shift and prey electivity of an endangered cyprinodontid fish endemic to the Iberian Peninsula, the Spanish toothcarp (Aphanius iberus). The toothcarp’s diet was omnivorous, dominated by harpacticoid copepods (Mesochra lilljeborgi and Tisbe longicornis), copepod naupl...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Environmental Biology of Fishes
Main Authors: Alcaraz Cazorla, Carles, García-Berthou, Emili
Other Authors: Ministerio de Ciencia y Tecnología (Espanya)
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Springer Verlag 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10256/12406
http://hdl.handle.net/10503/36554
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10641-006-0018-0
Description
Summary:We studied the ontogenetic diet shift and prey electivity of an endangered cyprinodontid fish endemic to the Iberian Peninsula, the Spanish toothcarp (Aphanius iberus). The toothcarp’s diet was omnivorous, dominated by harpacticoid copepods (Mesochra lilljeborgi and Tisbe longicornis), copepod nauplii and detritus. Diet composition varied greatly among habitats, depending on prey availability. In a rarely inundated habitat (glasswort), there was more consumption of the isopod Protracheoniscus occidentalis and the harpacticoid copepod Mesochra lilljeborgi, while in algal mats another harpacticoid (Tisbe longicornis), chironomid dipterans and invertebrate eggs were more important in diet. Although a benthic feeding habitat has previously been suggested, in our study the diet was based rather on water column organisms for both glasswort and algal mat habitats. There was also an ontogenetic diet shift, with an increase of mean prey length with fish length, clearly linked to a microhabitat change. Smaller fish showed positive electivity and greater reliance on planktonic prey (e.g. copepod nauplii, the harpacticoid copepods Mesochra lilljeborgi and Tisbe longicornis, the rotifer Brachionus plicatilis, and ostracods), while larger fish elected and preyed on more benthic organisms (e.g. Canuella perplexa, Mesochra rapiens, and ephydrid dipterans) Financial support was provided by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Technology (REN2002-10059-E and REN2003-00477) and the Ministry of Universities, Research and Information Society (DURSI), the Government of Catalonia (Catalan Government Distinction Award for university research 2004 to EGB). CA held a doctoral fellowship (FPU AP 2002-0206) from the Spanish Ministry of Education