Feeding habits of the yellowtail flounder and production of its invertebrate prey on Georges Bank
Feeding habits of the yellowtail flounder and production of its invertebrate prey on Georges Bank
Date
1985-09
Authors
Collie, Jeremy S.
Linked Authors
Person
Alternative Title
Citable URI
As Published
Date Created
Location
Georges Bank
DOI
10.1575/1912/3151
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Keywords
Flatfishes
Fishes
Feeding and feeds
Gloria Michelle (Ship) Cruise
Wieczno (Ship) Cruise
Fishes
Feeding and feeds
Gloria Michelle (Ship) Cruise
Wieczno (Ship) Cruise
Abstract
As part of the Georges Bank Benthic Infauna Monitoring Program,
size-frequency analysis was used to study the life history and production
of three benthic amphipod species: Ampelisca agassizi, Unciola inermis and
Ericthonius fasciatus. Abundant over large areas of Georges Bank, these
amphipods are important prey of yellowtail flounder. From benthic grab
samples collected quarterly during 1981 to 1983, over 200 individuals of
each species were measured for each sampling date. The computer program
NORMSEP separated the length-frequency distributions into cohorts. Growth
and mortality rates were determined by following cohorts through time;
production was calculated as the sum of growth increments. Differences
in the population dynamics of the three species were exemplified by annual
production-to-biomass ratios (P/B). E. fasciatus had the highest P/B (2.8
to 4.1), followed by U. inermis (1.3 to 2.7) and A. agassizi (1.3 to 1.4).
These results, the first direct production estimates for benthic macrofaunal
species on Georges Bank, are compared to production estimates for
other marine amphipod species. Amphipod production rates on Georges Bank
are as high as production rates of related near-shore species with similar
life-spans.
The Northeast Fisheries Center sampled yellowtail flounder stomachs
at three sites on four quarterly dates from August 1982 to May 1983. As
closely as possible, stomach sampling coincided with the dates and locations
of benthic monitoring to enable direct comparison between ingested
and available food. Stomach contents were sorted and weighed and important
prey species were measured. Yellowtail flounder feed mainly on
benthic macrofauna; amphipods and polychaetes are the most important prey
groups. Although the diet composition varied among stations and dates, in
each case a few prey species constituted the bulk of the diet. Selection
indices were calculated to compare the species composition of the stomach
contents to that of the benthic macrofauna. Food selection by yellowtail
flounder is explained on the basis of prey life history and prey size.
The species- and size-selection indices account for most of the variability
in diet composition. A log-normal curve was fit, by least squares,
to the size-selection indices; according to this fit, the optimum prey
weight for yellowtail flounder is 21 mg.
The rate of food consumption by yellowtail flounder was calculated
by two methods. The bioenergetic method sums the food required to
satisfy the energetic requirements of the fish. The second method is
based on the weight of stomach contents and the rate of food evacuation
from the stomach. The bioenergetic method gave consistently higher
results (1.4 to 1.6 kg fish-l yr-1) than the stomach-content method
(0.5 to 0.8 kg fish-l yr-1). Yellowtail flounder abundance was
estimated by a method that uses the commercial catch data to standardize
the survey, relative-abundance index. These abundance estimates were
divided by the appropriate areas to obtain yellowtail flounder density
estimates for fall 1982 of 20.0 and 41.3 fish per hectare for Georges
Bank and Southern New England, respectively. Consumption rates per fish
were multiplied by flounder density to obtain estimates of consumption
per unit area, which range from 1.2 to 6.3 gww m-2 yr-l. Annual
production of six important prey species was calculated. Yellowtail
flounder consumption as a percentage of prey production was 6 to 12%, 2
to 5%, and 1 to 3%, for the amphipods Unciola inermis, Ericthonius
fasciatus and Ampelisca agassizi, respectively; 11 to 34% and 7 to 21%
for the polychaetes Chone infundibuliformis and Nephtys incisa,
respectively; and less than 1% for the sand dollar, Echinarachnius parma.
Description
Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution September 1985
Embargo Date
Citation
Collie, J. S. (1985). Feeding habits of the yellowtail flounder and production of its invertebrate prey on Georges Bank [Doctoral thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution]. Woods Hole Open Access Server. https://doi.org/10.1575/1912/3151