Aquaculture Science
Online ISSN : 2185-0194
Print ISSN : 0371-4217
ISSN-L : 0371-4217
Original paper
Feeding habit of juvenile fishes associated with drifting seaweeds in the East China Sea with reference to oceanographic parameters
Takamasa HasegawaAtsuyoshi MandaNaoki TakatsukiYuuki KawabataGregory N. NishiharaShinji FujitaRyo KawabeMisato YamadaTsukasa KinoshitaNobuhiro YamawakiYasuhiro MoriiYoshitaka Sakakura
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2016 Volume 64 Issue 2 Pages 157-171

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Abstract

Many commercially important fishes associate with drifting seaweeds in their juvenile stage, however, the ecological significance of drifting seaweeds for juvenile fishes is still unclear. We postulated that the following two hypotheses may be applicable for juvenile fishes associate with drifting seaweeds, the "concentration of food supply" hypothesis: juvenile fishes are attracted by phytal animals on the drifting seaweeds and the "indicator-log" hypothesis: fish use accumulations of drifting seaweed as an indicator of productive areas (e.g. frontal areas) for food. We investigated the frontal areas, zooplankton abundance around the drifting seaweed, and the food availability of fish juveniles associated with drifting seaweed accumulations in the East China Sea in 2012 and 2013. A total of 14 drifting seaweed mass and 22 species (n = 408) of fish juveniles were collected. We found that 49.7-99.7% of the individual fed on planktonic food and the feeding incidence on phytal animals was less than 50%. Although drifting seaweeds were aggregated around the frontal areas of surface currents, the zooplankton abundance was not significantly different between these frontal areas and other areas. Our findings indicate that ecological significance of drifting seaweeds as feeding habit is relatively low for juvenile fishes associated with drifting seaweeds.

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© 2016 Japanese Society for Aquaculture Science
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