Trophic ecology of black scabbardfish, Aphanopus carbo in the NE Atlantic—Assessment through stomach content and stable isotope analyses
Trophic ecology of black scabbardfish, Aphanopus carbo in the NE Atlantic—Assessment through stomach content and stable isotope analyses
The black scabbardfish is a deep water species of high commercial interest in the NE Atlantic. Specimens were collected from commercial trawls to the west of the British Isles and from longliners operating near Madeira between September 2008 and May 2010. Stomach content analysis was confined to samples from the northern area, because of a high number of empty stomachs from Madeira. Stable isotope analyses identified that black scabbardfish feeds on species with epipelagic and benthopelagic affinities. For the west of British Isles, the ?N values were significantly different between seasons suggesting a change in the diet throughout the year. Black scabbardfish have higher ?N and ?C values compared with other co-occurring benthopelagic feeders and lower nitrogen values than the true benthic predators and/or scavengers. Comparison with stable isotope analysis in samples from Madeira indicated that black scabbardfish feed at a similar trophic level and has the same trophic niche width in both areas, assuming similar baseline isotope compositions. The diet in the northern area comprised fish (68% N), crustaceans (22% N) and cephalopods (15% N) with blue whiting (Micromesistius poutassou) constituting 40% of the prey. Seasonal shift in diet was observed, with a predominance of blue whiting (70%) in the first quarter of the year, shifting to a more diverse diet in the remainder of the year. These results indicate that the diet of black scabbardfish is closely linked with the seasonal migration of blue whiting and that they likely select prey in proportion to availability. This study demonstrates that the combined used of both methods can elucidate the trophic ecology of black scabbardfish, in situations where conventional methods alone provide insufficient data.
Diet composition, Feeding strategy, Seasonal variability, Stable isotope analysis, Trophic ecology
1-10
Santos, Ana Ribeiro
59f0b3a7-b0c9-4ab1-b5c2-375f18b92b0a
Trueman, Clive
d00d3bd6-a47b-4d47-89ae-841c3d506205
Connolly, Paul
dd340ec8-9dab-4d45-b439-094116c50c01
Rogan, Emer
1ddb1335-3f01-4a66-8889-da0557c82e07
2013
Santos, Ana Ribeiro
59f0b3a7-b0c9-4ab1-b5c2-375f18b92b0a
Trueman, Clive
d00d3bd6-a47b-4d47-89ae-841c3d506205
Connolly, Paul
dd340ec8-9dab-4d45-b439-094116c50c01
Rogan, Emer
1ddb1335-3f01-4a66-8889-da0557c82e07
Santos, Ana Ribeiro, Trueman, Clive, Connolly, Paul and Rogan, Emer
(2013)
Trophic ecology of black scabbardfish, Aphanopus carbo in the NE Atlantic—Assessment through stomach content and stable isotope analyses.
Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers, 77, .
(doi:10.1016/j.dsr.2013.02.009).
Abstract
The black scabbardfish is a deep water species of high commercial interest in the NE Atlantic. Specimens were collected from commercial trawls to the west of the British Isles and from longliners operating near Madeira between September 2008 and May 2010. Stomach content analysis was confined to samples from the northern area, because of a high number of empty stomachs from Madeira. Stable isotope analyses identified that black scabbardfish feeds on species with epipelagic and benthopelagic affinities. For the west of British Isles, the ?N values were significantly different between seasons suggesting a change in the diet throughout the year. Black scabbardfish have higher ?N and ?C values compared with other co-occurring benthopelagic feeders and lower nitrogen values than the true benthic predators and/or scavengers. Comparison with stable isotope analysis in samples from Madeira indicated that black scabbardfish feed at a similar trophic level and has the same trophic niche width in both areas, assuming similar baseline isotope compositions. The diet in the northern area comprised fish (68% N), crustaceans (22% N) and cephalopods (15% N) with blue whiting (Micromesistius poutassou) constituting 40% of the prey. Seasonal shift in diet was observed, with a predominance of blue whiting (70%) in the first quarter of the year, shifting to a more diverse diet in the remainder of the year. These results indicate that the diet of black scabbardfish is closely linked with the seasonal migration of blue whiting and that they likely select prey in proportion to availability. This study demonstrates that the combined used of both methods can elucidate the trophic ecology of black scabbardfish, in situations where conventional methods alone provide insufficient data.
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Published date: 2013
Keywords:
Diet composition, Feeding strategy, Seasonal variability, Stable isotope analysis, Trophic ecology
Organisations:
Geochemistry
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Local EPrints ID: 353986
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/353986
ISSN: 0967-0637
PURE UUID: 01d063da-06a5-4623-97f9-14a50f0885c8
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Date deposited: 26 Jun 2013 13:34
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:17
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Author:
Ana Ribeiro Santos
Author:
Paul Connolly
Author:
Emer Rogan
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