Cephalopods as Prey. IV. Fishes

Predatory fishes that consume cephalopods have broad spectrum diets that include other groups, such as fishes and crustaceans. Extremely few fish predators feed on cephalopods to the virtual exclusion of other prey, although the tawny nurse shark Nebrius ferrugineus and the sicklefin weasel shark He...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences
Main Author: Smale, M. J.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Royal Society of London 1996
Subjects:
Online Access:https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/29562/
https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/29562/1/Smale.pdf
https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.1996.0094
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Summary:Predatory fishes that consume cephalopods have broad spectrum diets that include other groups, such as fishes and crustaceans. Extremely few fish predators feed on cephalopods to the virtual exclusion of other prey, although the tawny nurse shark Nebrius ferrugineus and the sicklefin weasel shark Hemigaleus microstoma may be exceptions, and some deep-living spiny dogfish may feed largely on cephalopods when they are available. Cephalopods are rarely taken in estuaries but they become more important prey on continental shelves and squids may be more dominant prey during their spawning aggregations. Cephalopods generally become more important components of the diets of larger predatory fishes, such as sharks, that inhabit the continental slope and rise. They may be important to pelagic fishes, such as swordfish and tunas in some parts of the oceans. Cephalopods are rarely taken by benthic Antarctic fishes but they are important prey of some pelagic fishes in the Arctic. Abundance and size of potential prey is critical, and the behaviour of both predator and potential prey is decisive, in prey choice. Factors such as prey switching with growth, between areas and at different times, have major influences on the diets of predators. There are extremely few studies that obtain rigorous enough data to allow quantitative analysis of the significance of cephalopods (or other prey) in the diets of predatory fishes and even the most comprehensive studies are not predictive because findings relate only to the time period of each study. Nevertheless, cephalopods are important components of most marine food webs and, furthermore, may play an indirect role in facilitating prey capture to secondary predators, and in providing rejecta to benthic scavengers.