THE DIET OF CAPE HAKE MERLUCCIUS-CAPENSIS ON THE SOUTH COAST OF SOUTH-AFRICA

被引:0
|
作者
PILLAR, SC
WILKINSON, IS
机构
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
Q17 [水生生物学];
学科分类号
071004 ;
摘要
In stomach contents of Cape hake Merluccius capensis collected during demersal research surveys (1989-1994) on the south coast of South Africa, fish remains accounted for 92% by mass, crustaceans for 5% and cephalopods for 3%. Fish prey consisted of 51% pelagic, mainly anchovy (33%), round herring (11%) and pilchard, 24% horse mackerel and 17% demersal fish, mainly M. capensis. This dietary composition contrasts with that documented for the same species on the West Coast, where crustaceans and mesopelagic fish are more important in the diet of small and medium-sized (<50 cm) M. capensis, and horse mackerel are of minor importance in the diet of larger hake. Cannibalism was a more prominent feature in M. capensis on the South Coast (accounting for up to 25% of the diet) than it is on the West Coast, where interspecific (hake-on-hake) predation on Merluccius paradoxus is common. On the South Coast, M. capensis adapt their diet not only to exploit larger prey species but also larger prey items within a species, the length and size range of prey increasing significantly with predator length. The maximum ingestible prey size was around 50% of body length. Hake as small as 15 cm were piscivorous and cannibalistic, but the minimum length at which hake preyed on horse mackerel was 30 cm, and generally fish >15 cm were consumed at that length. Horse mackerel was an important food source for large M. capensis (>50 cm) on the South Coast.
引用
收藏
页码:225 / 239
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] ESTIMATION OF THE ANNUAL CONSUMPTION OF FOOD BY CAPE HAKE MERLUCCIUS-CAPENSIS AND M-PARADOXUS OFF THE SOUTH-AFRICAN WEST-COAST
    PUNT, AE
    LESLIE, RW
    DUPLESSIS, SE
    [J]. SOUTH AFRICAN JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE-SUID-AFRIKAANSE TYDSKRIF VIR SEEWETENSKAP, 1992, 12 : 611 - 634
  • [2] FEEDING SELECTIVITY OF JUVENILE CAPE HAKE MERLUCCIUS-CAPENSIS IN THE SOUTHERN BENGUELA
    PILLAR, SC
    BARANGE, M
    [J]. SOUTH AFRICAN JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE-SUID-AFRIKAANSE TYDSKRIF VIR SEEWETENSKAP, 1993, 13 : 255 - 268
  • [3] BACTERIAL-POPULATIONS ASSOCIATED WITH THE PROCESSING OF CAPE HAKE (MERLUCCIUS-CAPENSIS AND MERLUCCIUS-PARADOXUS)
    VENNEMANN, IH
    CLOETE, TE
    DYKES, GA
    VONHOLY, A
    [J]. JOURNAL OF FOOD PROTECTION, 1994, 57 (11) : 1016 - 1018
  • [4] CHANGES IN CATCHABILITY IN A BOTTOM-TRAWL FISHERY FOR CAPE HAKE (MERLUCCIUS-CAPENSIS)
    GORDOA, A
    HIGHTOWER, JE
    [J]. CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FISHERIES AND AQUATIC SCIENCES, 1991, 48 (10) : 1887 - 1895
  • [5] EFFECT OF PREY DENSITIES ON CANNIBALISM IN CAPE-HAKE (MERLUCCIUS-CAPENSIS) OFF NAMIBIA
    MACPHERSON, E
    GORDOA, A
    [J]. MARINE BIOLOGY, 1994, 119 (01) : 145 - 149
  • [6] ASPECTS OF THE SOUTH-AFRICAN LONGLINE FISHERY FOR KINGKLIP GENYPTERUS-CAPENSIS AND THE CAPE HAKES MERLUCCIUS-CAPENSIS AND MERLUCCIUS-PARADOXUS
    BADENHORST, A
    [J]. SOUTH AFRICAN JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE-SUID-AFRIKAANSE TYDSKRIF VIR SEEWETENSKAP, 1988, 6 : 33 - 42
  • [7] DEVELOPMENT OF THE CHONDROCRANIUM OF THE SHALLOW-WATER CAPE HAKE MERLUCCIUS-CAPENSIS (CAST) .2. VISCEROCRANIUM
    BADENHORST, A
    [J]. SOUTH AFRICAN JOURNAL OF ZOOLOGY, 1989, 24 (01): : 49 - 57
  • [8] Tracking the extinct giant Cape zebra (Equus capensis) on the Cape south coast of South Africa
    Helm, Charles W. W.
    Carr, Andrew S. S.
    Cawthra, Hayley C. C.
    De Vynck, Jan C. C.
    Dixon, Mark G. G.
    Grabe, Pieter-Jan
    Thesen, Guy H. H.
    Venter, Jan A. A.
    [J]. QUATERNARY RESEARCH, 2023, 114 : 178 - 190
  • [9] UPWELLING ALONG THE SOUTH COAST OF THE CAPE PROVINCE, SOUTH-AFRICA
    SCHUMANN, EH
    PERRINS, LA
    HUNTER, IT
    [J]. SOUTH AFRICAN JOURNAL OF SCIENCE, 1982, 78 (06) : 238 - 242
  • [10] DEVELOPMENT OF THE CHONDROCRANIUM OF THE SHALLOW-WATER CAPE HAKE MERLUCCIUS-CAPENSIS (CAST) .1. NEUROCRANIUM
    BADENHORST, A
    [J]. SOUTH AFRICAN JOURNAL OF ZOOLOGY, 1989, 24 (01): : 33 - 48