1. Dietary overlap between the potential competitors herring, sprat and anchovy in the North Sea
- Author
-
Kristina Raab, Axel Temming, Adriaan D. Rijnsdorp, C. Boeree, L.A.J. Nagelkerke, and Mark Dickey-Collas
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Sprattus sprattus ,fish eggs ,Aquatic Science ,Visserij ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Zooplankton ,Engraulis ,Herring ,Aquaculture and Fisheries ,Anchovy ,European anchovy ,14. Life underwater ,mediterranean sea ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,trophic interactions ,Ecology ,biology ,Aquacultuur en Visserij ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,central baltic sea ,Sprat ,population-dynamics ,Clupea ,clupea-harengus ,biology.organism_classification ,Wageningen Marine Research ,Fishery ,engraulis-encrasicolus l ,WIAS ,irish sea ,feeding-behavior ,intraguild predation - Abstract
European anchovy Engraulis encrasicolus increased its abundance and distribution in the North Sea during the mid-1990s and may consume similar zooplankton to and/or compete with other occupants of the North Sea like herring Clupea harengus and sprat Sprattus sprattus. The diets of adult anchovy, sprat and juvenile herring of comparable sizes, sampled close in time and space, were compared to understand how the 3 species prey on zooplankton and establish whether their diets overlap or not. Anchovy was found to be more generalist, consuming a higher diversity of prey items. Herring was more specialized, with low diversity of food items. Sprat was intermediate between anchovy and herring. The dietary overlap between anchovy and sprat was highest, followed by herring and sprat before anchovy and herring. The mean weight of stomach contents did not differ between species. We conclude that of the 3 species, anchovy is likely to be the least affected by changing plankton communities.
- Published
- 2012