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MEPS 175:35-49 (1998)
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Abstract
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Feeding of anchovy Engraulis encrasicolus larvae in the northwestern Adriatic Sea in response to changing hydrobiological conditions
D. V. P. Conway1,*, S. H. Coombs1, C. Smith2
1Natural Environment Research Council, Centre for Coastal and Marine Sciences, Plymouth Marine Laboratory, Prospect Place, Plymouth, Devon PL1 3DH, United Kingdom
2School of Biological Sciences, Queen Mary and Westfield College, University of London, London E1 4NS, United Kingdom
*E-mail: dvpc@ccms.ac.uk

ABSTRACT: Results from depth integrated and vertically stratified plankton sampling in the northwestern Adriatic Sea were used for comparison of gut contents of larvae of European anchovy Engraulis encrasicolus with composition and concentration of
potential prey in the plankton. Sampling was carried out over a grid of stations both before and after a period of increased wind mixing to investigate changes in food availability and larval feeding success. All larvae had empty guts soon after dusk,
indicating daytime feeding and rapid gut clearance. With increasing larval length there was a greater percentage of specimens with empty guts, despite suitable food being available in the plankton for these larger larvae; this suggests differential gut
evacuation during sampling--possibly related to the degree of gut development. Larval diet was principally the various developmental stages of copepods, especially calanoid and cyclopoid nauplii, which were preferentially selected by larvae, whereas
selection was against harpacticoid nauplii. Lamellibranch larvae and Peridinium spp. were generally abundant in the plankton, but were only present in the gut contents in any number when the preferred dietary organisms were present in the plankton
at low concentrations. The number of food organisms in the gut contents increased with concentration of the preferred food organisms in the plankton up to a limit of ~50 organisms l-1. Within the upper 18 m of the water column, there was a
reduction in the proportion of larvae with food in their guts with increasing depth, irrespective of the vertical profile of food concentration. Following a period of wind mixing the composition of the plankton changed. This was reflected in the diet of
anchovy larvae, which altered in parallel. There was also an overall 41% decrease in concentration of the preferred food particles of larvae in the plankton following the period of wind mixing, but larvae were still able to maintain their food intake.
These results show that anchovy larvae can successfully adapt their diet to a changing prey field and suggest that in the conditions observed in the northern Adriatic, quite radical changes in the feeding environment were probably insufficient to affect
overall larval mortality.
KEY WORDS: Anchovy larvae · Diet · Feeding success · Food selection · Wind mixing

Published in MEPS Vol.
175
(1998) on December 17
ISSN: 0171-8630.
Copyright © Inter-Research, Oldendorf/Luhe, 1998
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