Anton Höper, Nicole Funk, Felix Mittermayer, Axel Temming, Steffen Funk
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Food intake of early juvenile western Baltic cod (Gadus morhua) during settlement transition.
This study examines the gut contents of 203 early juvenile Atlantic cod [17-101 mm ± 18.48 mm standard deviation (SD)] from the Western Baltic Sea (ICES Subdivision 22) collected between 2020 and 2022. According to the observed prey (proportion of pelagic, intermediate and benthic items) in the cod guts, settlement transition from a pelagic to a benthic lifestyle is estimated to take place at 46-87 mm cod total length (TL). Copepod species were the preferred prey item of pelagic feeding juvenile cod, dominated by the genus Acartia, which is also the most abundant copepod genus in the area. With increasing cod size, Centropages spp. and Cladocera species were favoured. Intermediate prey consisted mostly of late bivalve veliger larvae. Although a switch from planktonic to intermediate prey was not observable in every cod individual (probably due to differences in prey availability between years and stations), our results showed that especially at the beginning of the demersal life, all examined cod relied almost exclusively on the Cumacean species Diastylis rathkei. Its importance to cod during the settlement transition is in accordance with earlier findings from the same and adjacent areas highlighting it as potential key, but also bottleneck, species for cod recruitment success. Because D. rathkei is highly sensitive to low oxygen conditions, and oxygen minimum zones are spreading in the Western Baltic Sea, the decreasing access to D. rathkei as prey might be a contributing factor to the low recruitment success of cod in recent years.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Fish Biology is a leading international journal for scientists engaged in all aspects of fishes and fisheries research, both fresh water and marine. The journal publishes high-quality papers relevant to the central theme of fish biology and aims to bring together under one cover an overall picture of the research in progress and to provide international communication among researchers in many disciplines with a common interest in the biology of fish.