dc.identifier.citation |
Gammanpila, M., Amarasinghe, U.S. and Wijeyaratne, M.J.S. 2016. Trophic ecology and resource partitioning of fish assemblages in brush-parks of Negombo estuary, Sri Lanka. In Proceedings of the International Research Symposium on Pure and Applied Sciences (IRSPAS 2016), Faculty of Science, University of Kelaniya, Sri Lanka. p 01. |
en_US |
dc.description.abstract |
three major brush park fishing areas (Munnakkaraya, Katunayake and Dungalpitiya)
in Negombo estuary, Sri Lanka were investigated during April 2014 - April 2016 to
classify diet composition, evaluate trophic guilds structure, dietary breadths,
interspecific dietary overlap and to determine the degree of food resource partitioning
of the community. Fraction of food (proportion by volume) consumed by species was
used to establish trophic guilds, applying dietary niche breadth, and the inter-specific
food niche competition among species was evaluated using Horn’s index.
A cluster analysis, based on Euclidean distance resulted in six trophic guilds on the
basis of feeding preferences. Although many fishes fed on a diverse range of food
items, diets of 15.2% of fish species, which were included in ‘omnivore’ trophic
guild, were dominated by algae/macrophytes with less amount of animal matter
(omnivores), 23.9% were detritivores, 2.2% were molluscivores, 2.2% were
zooplantivores, 17.4% were macro-crustacean predators and 39.1% were piscivores.
The trophic levels of the constituent species varied between 1.0 and 3.0 and the both
extremes were occupied by about 60% of the species in the fish assemblage.
Standardized dietary niche breadth was highly variable. Species in the omnivorous
feeding guild (e.g., Gerres oblongus) and those in the detritivorous feeding guild
(e.g., Liza subviridis) showed higher dietary niche breadths (>0.82) showing
occurrence of wide choices of food categories for them. The species of intermediate
trophic class such as Carangoides talamparoides in macro-crustacean feeding guild
and those which fed on macro-crustaceans and fish such as Epinephelus sp. and
Lutjanus fulviflamma also had broader (>0.88) dietary breadths. The piscivores
Sphyraena jello and Terapon puta with highly specialized feeding habits had the
narrowest (0.0) dietary breadth.
Species which primarily fed on phytoplankton/macrophytes and detritus such as
Mugilids and Siganids, and species such as Acanthurus gahhm, Monodactylus
argenteus, Scatophagus argus, Etroplus suratensis, Oreochromis mossambicus and
Oreochromis niloticus indicated high dietary overlap ranging from 0.50 to 0.97. It
was also evident that even majority of the species in the feeding guilds of macrocrustacean
predators and piscivores exhibited relatively high dietary overlaps (range
0.1 - 1.0). The present study therefore illustrated that the fish assemblage in brush
parks show both food resource partitioning and dietary competition, the former
characterizing divergence of resource use to minimize competition for limited food
resources and the latter reflecting resource abundance. |
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