The feeding ecology of and carbon and nitrogen budgets for Engraulis capensis in the southern Benguela ecosystem

Bibliography: leaves 179-231. === The two main schools of thought regarding the diets of intermediate microphagous clupeids are: A) that they are herbivorous and B) that they are omnivorous, but consume mainly zooplankton. The former view has been employed to explain their abundance in upwelling are...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: James, Andrew Gordon
Other Authors: Field, John G
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/8409
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-84092020-08-08T05:14:03Z The feeding ecology of and carbon and nitrogen budgets for Engraulis capensis in the southern Benguela ecosystem James, Andrew Gordon Field, John G Zoology Bibliography: leaves 179-231. The two main schools of thought regarding the diets of intermediate microphagous clupeids are: A) that they are herbivorous and B) that they are omnivorous, but consume mainly zooplankton. The former view has been employed to explain their abundance in upwelling areas, since their purported ability to efficiently utilise the primary producers shortens the pelagic food chain to 1 or 2 links. The literature concerning the trophic ecology of some commercially important clupeids is reviewed and it is concluded that few are true phytophagists. Most are omnivorous and derive the bulk of their energy from zooplankton. Results indicating that these fish are herbivorous are largely due to inadequate sampling strategies and analytical techniques. The results of field work show that Engraulis capensis feeds selectively upon meso- and macro-zooplankton. Laboratory experiments supported these findings. Prey are selected on the basis of size and particulate feeding is the dominant mode of intake when the' fish are presented with a mixed size assemblage of prey. Engraulis capensis cannot filter feed on particles less than 0.200mm maximum dimension, and there is a threshold size of approximately 0.700mm when feeding behaviour switches from filter to particulate feeding. Particulate feeding produced faster clearance rates than filtering, and the Cape anchovy feeds at maximum efficiency over most of their prey size spectrum. 2014-10-11T12:21:33Z 2014-10-11T12:21:33Z 1988 Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/8409 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Science Department of Biological Sciences
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Zoology
spellingShingle Zoology
James, Andrew Gordon
The feeding ecology of and carbon and nitrogen budgets for Engraulis capensis in the southern Benguela ecosystem
description Bibliography: leaves 179-231. === The two main schools of thought regarding the diets of intermediate microphagous clupeids are: A) that they are herbivorous and B) that they are omnivorous, but consume mainly zooplankton. The former view has been employed to explain their abundance in upwelling areas, since their purported ability to efficiently utilise the primary producers shortens the pelagic food chain to 1 or 2 links. The literature concerning the trophic ecology of some commercially important clupeids is reviewed and it is concluded that few are true phytophagists. Most are omnivorous and derive the bulk of their energy from zooplankton. Results indicating that these fish are herbivorous are largely due to inadequate sampling strategies and analytical techniques. The results of field work show that Engraulis capensis feeds selectively upon meso- and macro-zooplankton. Laboratory experiments supported these findings. Prey are selected on the basis of size and particulate feeding is the dominant mode of intake when the' fish are presented with a mixed size assemblage of prey. Engraulis capensis cannot filter feed on particles less than 0.200mm maximum dimension, and there is a threshold size of approximately 0.700mm when feeding behaviour switches from filter to particulate feeding. Particulate feeding produced faster clearance rates than filtering, and the Cape anchovy feeds at maximum efficiency over most of their prey size spectrum.
author2 Field, John G
author_facet Field, John G
James, Andrew Gordon
author James, Andrew Gordon
author_sort James, Andrew Gordon
title The feeding ecology of and carbon and nitrogen budgets for Engraulis capensis in the southern Benguela ecosystem
title_short The feeding ecology of and carbon and nitrogen budgets for Engraulis capensis in the southern Benguela ecosystem
title_full The feeding ecology of and carbon and nitrogen budgets for Engraulis capensis in the southern Benguela ecosystem
title_fullStr The feeding ecology of and carbon and nitrogen budgets for Engraulis capensis in the southern Benguela ecosystem
title_full_unstemmed The feeding ecology of and carbon and nitrogen budgets for Engraulis capensis in the southern Benguela ecosystem
title_sort feeding ecology of and carbon and nitrogen budgets for engraulis capensis in the southern benguela ecosystem
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/8409
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