Publication | Closed Access
Role of feeding and prey distribution of summer and southern flounder in selection of estuarine nursery habitats
71
Citations
15
References
1995
Year
BiologyAquatic Food SystemEngineeringNatural SciencesPredator-prey InteractionEvolutionary BiologyEarly Juvenile SummerIntraguild PredationSouthern FlounderFishery ScienceMarine EcologyFood Web InteractionAquatic OrganismPrey DistributionMarine BiologyPrey AbundanceMysid GradientsEstuarine Nursery Habitats
Diets of metamorphosing larvae and early juvenile summer and southern flounder were examined during the settlement period when their distributions overlapped and during a subsequent period when the two flounders were found in different habitats. Prey abundance on tidal flats was examined along an upstream transect. Though initially similar, diets of the two species diverged prior to the development of a segregated distribution. These diet differences reflected those found in the diets of the two species following segregation. Southern flounder ate more active epifaunal prey: mysids, amphipods and calanoid copepods and appeared to be an ambush predator. The summer flounder ate primarily infauna: polychaetes, and invertebrate parts and appeared to be an active forager. Distribution of prey within the study area suggested that mysid gradients may influence movement of southern flounder to nursery grounds. The coupling of biotic and abiotic gradients are probably important in creating nursery areas and guiding fishes to species specific habitat types.
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