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Limburg, K.E., M.L. Pace, D. Fischer, and K.K. Arend, 1997.
Consumption, Selectivity, and Use of Zooplankton by Larval Striped Bass and
White Perch in a Seasonally Pulsed Estuary, SUNY College of Environmental
Science & Forestry.
Reprinted with Permission from Transactions of the American Fisheries Society
(1997) 126(4): 607-621
Consumption, Selectivity, and Use of Zooplankton by Larval Striped Bass and
White Perch in a Seasonally Pulsed Estuary
Abstract
Many estuaries exhibit seasonal pulses of phytoplankton and zooplankton
production. Larval fishes that co-occur with these "blooms" should be
at a growth and survival advantage compared with larvae that occur before or
after the bloom, although this has been difficult to observe in many systems. We
tested this potential advantage for larval (< 10 mm notochord length) striped
bass Morone saxatilis and white perch M. americana in the Hudson River by
examining consumption and feeding selectivities with respect to zooplankton
blooms. The cladoceran Bosmina longirostris and large copepodite and adult
copepods together composed 97.4% and 90.9% of larval striped bass and white
perch diets, respectively. Peak consumption rates of Bosmina coincided with the
bloom, whereas copepod consumption rates continued to increase throughout the
sampling period. Selectivity for copepods was inversely related to selectivity
for Bosmina and was high, except at those sites and times when Bosmina densities
exceeded 14 animals/l. Per capita energy consumption was highest (0.75 and 0.39
J/individual for striped bass and white perch, respectively) after the bloom
period, but specific consumption (energy consumed/mg wet weight fish) during and
after the bloom were similar (2.39 versus 2.35 J/mg dry weight during the bloom
versus after the bloom for striped bass and 2.58 versus 2.63 J/mg for white
perch). Our energetics analyses indicate that different-sized fish experience
different benefit-cost (consumption benefit: respiration cost) ratios, but
strong trends exist with respect to the zooplankton bloom. Prebloom cohorts have
the least available food and lowest metabolic costs (respiration). Postbloom
cohorts have both high consumption and respiration rates due to increased
temperatures. Cohorts coincident with the bloom have moderately high specific
consumption rates and lower metabolic costs relative to late cohorts. We
conclude that larval cohorts coincident with the bloom possess an energetic
advantage relative to early cohorts but not relative to late cohorts.
Contact: Karin Limburg, SUNY College of Environmental Science & Forestry,
One Forestry Way, 133 Illick Hall, Syracuse, NY 13210
Key Words: White_perch,
Basic_biology
Product Type: Research, Basic_biology
User Type: General
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