León Felipe Martínez-Juárez , Juan J. Schmitter-Soto , Nancy Cabanillas-Terán , Norman Mercado-Silva
{"title":"墨西哥加勒比海从海湾到珊瑚礁生态系统中笛鲷(Teleostei: Lutjanidae)的食性变化","authors":"León Felipe Martínez-Juárez , Juan J. Schmitter-Soto , Nancy Cabanillas-Terán , Norman Mercado-Silva","doi":"10.1016/j.watbs.2023.100211","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div><p>Fishes use environmental resources differently. Snapper ontogenic movements among coastal habitats lead to diverse diets. We investigated the diets of seven snapper species (<em>Lutjanus apodus</em>, <em>L. analis</em>, <em>L. griseus</em>, <em>L. jocu</em>, <em>L. mahogoni</em>, <em>L. synagris</em>, and <em>Ocyurus chrysurus</em>) in three interconnected coastal environments in the western Caribbean: Río Huach channel, Chetumal/Corozal bay, and the adjacent Xcalak reef lagoon. These three encompass all habitats used by the seven species in the study area. Snapper diets were mostly composed of fish and crustaceans, but dominance of either group varied among the studied habitats; for example, fish were the main prey for <em>L. apodus</em> from the reef lagoon zone, but second in the bay. Snappers are piscivorous-invertivorous mesopredators; the species that relied the most on fishes were <em>L. griseus</em> and <em>L. jocu</em>, whereas <em>O</em>. <em>chrysurus</em> preferred crustaceans. Stomach content results revealed a high degree of dietary overlap among species. Our findings suggested a tradeoff in relative weight between fish and crustaceans as the main food source of snappers at these connected areas, supporting the hypothesis of niche segregation. Our results can be used as a baseline to further our understanding of the ecology and differences in resource use by snapper species in an area undergoing important anthropogenic changes.</p></div>","PeriodicalId":101277,"journal":{"name":"Water Biology and Security","volume":"3 1","pages":"Article 100211"},"PeriodicalIF":5.1000,"publicationDate":"2024-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2772735123000975/pdfft?md5=a4cb4a5dd2ad1426f87dba374ae976ae&pid=1-s2.0-S2772735123000975-main.pdf","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Diet variability of snappers (Teleostei: Lutjanidae) in a bay-to-reef ecosystem of the Mexican Caribbean\",\"authors\":\"León Felipe Martínez-Juárez , Juan J. 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Snappers are piscivorous-invertivorous mesopredators; the species that relied the most on fishes were <em>L. griseus</em> and <em>L. jocu</em>, whereas <em>O</em>. <em>chrysurus</em> preferred crustaceans. Stomach content results revealed a high degree of dietary overlap among species. Our findings suggested a tradeoff in relative weight between fish and crustaceans as the main food source of snappers at these connected areas, supporting the hypothesis of niche segregation. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
鱼类对环境资源的利用方式各不相同。笛鲷在沿海栖息地之间的本体移动导致其饮食的多样性。我们研究了加勒比海西部三个相互连接的沿海环境中 7 种鲷鱼(Lutjanus apodus、L. analis、L. griseus、L. jocu、L. mahogoni、L. synagris 和 Ocyurus chrysurus)的食性:这三个地方包括了所有的栖息地:Río Huach 海峡、Chetumal/Corozal 海湾和邻近的 Xcalak 礁泻湖。这三个地方涵盖了研究区域内七个物种使用的所有栖息地。鲷鱼的食物主要由鱼类和甲壳类动物组成,但在不同的研究栖息地,鱼类和甲壳类动物的优势地位各不相同;例如,在珊瑚礁泻湖区,鱼类是鲷鱼的主要猎物,但在海湾,鱼类则是鲷鱼的第二大猎物。笛鲷是食鱼类的中层食肉动物;最依赖鱼类的物种是 L. griseus 和 L. jocu,而 O. chrysurus 则喜欢甲壳类动物。胃内容物结果显示,不同物种之间的食物有很大程度的重叠。我们的研究结果表明,在这些相连地区,甲鱼的主要食物来源是鱼类和甲壳类,两者之间的相对重量存在权衡,这支持了生态位隔离的假说。我们的研究结果可作为进一步了解笛鲷物种在经历重大人为变化地区的生态学和资源利用差异的基线。
Diet variability of snappers (Teleostei: Lutjanidae) in a bay-to-reef ecosystem of the Mexican Caribbean
Fishes use environmental resources differently. Snapper ontogenic movements among coastal habitats lead to diverse diets. We investigated the diets of seven snapper species (Lutjanus apodus, L. analis, L. griseus, L. jocu, L. mahogoni, L. synagris, and Ocyurus chrysurus) in three interconnected coastal environments in the western Caribbean: Río Huach channel, Chetumal/Corozal bay, and the adjacent Xcalak reef lagoon. These three encompass all habitats used by the seven species in the study area. Snapper diets were mostly composed of fish and crustaceans, but dominance of either group varied among the studied habitats; for example, fish were the main prey for L. apodus from the reef lagoon zone, but second in the bay. Snappers are piscivorous-invertivorous mesopredators; the species that relied the most on fishes were L. griseus and L. jocu, whereas O. chrysurus preferred crustaceans. Stomach content results revealed a high degree of dietary overlap among species. Our findings suggested a tradeoff in relative weight between fish and crustaceans as the main food source of snappers at these connected areas, supporting the hypothesis of niche segregation. Our results can be used as a baseline to further our understanding of the ecology and differences in resource use by snapper species in an area undergoing important anthropogenic changes.