Publication | Open Access
Ontogenetic diet profiles and size‐dependent diet partitioning of ruffe <i>Gymnocephalus cernuus</i>, perch <i>Perca fluviatilis</i> and pumpkinseed <i>Lepomis gibbosus</i> in Lake Balaton
69
Citations
42
References
2006
Year
BiologyAquatic Food SystemBiodiversityLake BalatonDiet PartitioningOntogenetic Diet ProfilesDiet OntogenyNatural SciencesZooplankton EcologyEvolutionary BiologyFreshwater EcosystemNative RuffeSize‐dependent Diet PartitioningFood Web InteractionAquatic Organism
Abstract – Life‐long diet ontogeny and size‐dependent intra‐ and interspecific diet partitioning of the native ruffe and perch and the introduced pumpkinseed, were studied in Lake Balaton. Estimated intraspecific diet overlap was high in ruffe, whereas in perch and pumpkinseed only the neighbouring size groups exhibited a high diet similarity. Interspecific diet overlap among size groups of the three species was moderate and ≥60% diet overlap occurred only in 13 size group pair variations out of the 429 analysed. The earliest developmental stages of the three species were planktivorous, whereas larger ruffe and some size groups of perch and pumpkinseed fed dominantly on chironomids. Adult perch and pumpkinseed consumed different littoral macroinvertebrates, while the largest perch were piscivorous. Although productivities of the two studied areas differ significantly, this had only little effect on the diet ontogeny and diet partitioning of the three species. Present results suggest that in Lake Balaton these three species effectively partition food resources throughout their life span.
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