Fisheries science
Print ISSN : 0919-9268
Predator-prey systems of drifting seaweed communities offthe Tohoku coast, northern Japan, as determined by feeding habitanalysis of phytal animals
MINORU SANOMICHIO OMORIKAZUYA TANIGUCHI
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JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

2003 Volume 69 Issue 2 Pages 260-268

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Abstract
We collected phytal animals (fauna associated with drifting seaweeds) off the Tohoku coast in northern Japan in May and June 1994 to examine their feeding habits. Phytal animals were assignedto the following three feeding habit groups: (i) carnivores preying on crustaceans: a gammarid (Stenothoe sp.) and a decapod megalops; (ii) omnivores feeding on crustaceans and pinnate diatoms: a cirripede (Lepas anserifera), three gammarids (Calliopius sp., Jassa slatteryi and J. marmorata), an isopod (Idotea metallica), a decapod crustacean (Planes cyaneus), a decapod megalopsand two caprellids (Caprella penantis and Caprella mutica); and (iii) herbivores grazing on pinnate diatoms, fucoids and seaweeds other than fucoids: three gammarids (Allorchestes angusta, Amphithoe lacertosa and Perampithoe lindbergi), an isopod (Cymodoce japonica) and a polychaete (Platynereis bicanaliculata). Pinnate diatoms in the gut contents were composed mainly of Licmophora spp., Navicula spp., Nitzschia spp. and Cocconeis spp. and seaweeds other than fucoids (i.e. Ectocarpus siliculosus and Sphacelaria furcigera). The latter twoalgae seemed to be epiphytes on drifting seaweeds. These results suggest that phytal animals play an important role in drifting seaweed communities through trophic linkage with two primary producers (i.e. drifting seaweeds and the epiphytes growing on them).
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