Title of article :
Feeding ecology and ontogenic diet shifts of juvenile fish species in an inverse estuary: The Sine-Saloum, Senegal
Author/Authors :
Ndombour Gning، نويسنده , , Guy Vidy، نويسنده , , Omar Thiom Thiaw ، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Abstract :
We examined the diet of juvenile fish of four species e Eucinostomus melanopterus (Gerreidae), Ethmalosa fimbriata (Clupeidae), Monodactylus
sebae (Monodactylidae), and Sarotherodon melanotheron (Cichlidae) e between their appearance on the nursery ground and the
end of the recruitment season, when they began to shift to deeper parts of the estuary. Fish were collected from the Sine-Saloum, an inverse
estuary in Senegal, West Africa. Sampling was conducted at six sites located along the salinity gradient. The study was conducted in the context
of an inverse estuary where increasing salinity leads to the disappearance of mangroves.
Stomach contents were sorted and the preferred prey determined to the lowest possible taxonomic level. Ontogenic changes in diet were
characterized and results expressed as the frequency of occurrence of the prey.
The results showed that almost all juveniles began with a ‘‘classical’’ zooplanktonic diet. Following that first stage, they then preyed on items
belonging to the periphytic community in the vicinity of mangroves (when present). Juvenile Ethmalosa fimbriata, a phytoplankton feeder as an
adult, displayed that kind of transitory diet, a finding not previously recorded. Plant material (algae and leaves) occurred frequently in the stomach
contents. All four species began the ontogenic shift toward their adult diet at a length of 50 mm.
The periphytic community supported on mangrove prop roots contributes to the diet of juvenile fish living in proximity to mangroves; this
may not be verified for those fish living in open waters.
Keywords :
West Africa , Sine-Saloum , Senegal , inverse estuary , juvenile fish , salinity , diet shift , diet , Mangroves
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science