Does structural change in the zooplankton community affect larval fish feeding in anthropogenically disturbed tropical waters?

Anthropogenic perturbations and climate change have altered the zooplankton community structure in the Klang Strait during the past 30 years, in that the taxa of large-bodied crustaceans (Acartiidae, Calanidae, Pseudodiaptomidae) are being replaced by those of small-bodied crustaceans (Oithonidae, E...

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Main Authors: Quah, W. C., Chew, L. L., Chong, Ving Ching, Chu, Cecilia, Teoh, C. Y., Ooi, A. L.
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Published: Springer 2022
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/33679/
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spelling my.um.eprints.336792022-07-25T06:38:26Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/33679/ Does structural change in the zooplankton community affect larval fish feeding in anthropogenically disturbed tropical waters? Quah, W. C. Chew, L. L. Chong, Ving Ching Chu, Cecilia Teoh, C. Y. Ooi, A. L. GC Oceanography GE Environmental Sciences QK Botany Anthropogenic perturbations and climate change have altered the zooplankton community structure in the Klang Strait during the past 30 years, in that the taxa of large-bodied crustaceans (Acartiidae, Calanidae, Pseudodiaptomidae) are being replaced by those of small-bodied crustaceans (Oithonidae, Ectinosomatidae), gelatinous jellyfish, and appendicularians. Since zooplankton constitutes the main larval food, we questioned: have bottom-up effects impacted larval fish feeding via the food chain? Larval fish that were sampled previously (1985-1986) and nearly three decades thereafter (2013-2014) were analysed for their dietary composition. Despite the dramatic replacements of zooplankton taxa due to escalating anthropogenic disturbances, the dominant copepod families, Paracalanidae, Oithonidae and Euterpinidae, remain the major prey for fish larvae. Dietary shifts in prey composition from before to after impact depend on the larval fish family and their ontogenetic stage. Dietary changes are observed in the Bregmacerotidae, Engraulidae, Gobiidae and Sciaenidae that opportunistically feed on the small-bodied copepods (oithonids and Parvocalanus crassirostris), whereas the Callionymidae, Clupeidae and Cynoglossidae naturally feed on these copepods even before these prey become numerically dominant with anthropogenic disturbance. There is no dietary shift in the Leiognathidae, exceptional in that they are specialists feeding mainly on detritus and polychaete larvae. Since the bottom-up effects are not comprehensive among fish families and dietary plasticity is evident, it is postulated that only the intolerant or non-adaptable larval species are adversely affected by the environmental perturbations. Springer 2022-01 Article PeerReviewed Quah, W. C. and Chew, L. L. and Chong, Ving Ching and Chu, Cecilia and Teoh, C. Y. and Ooi, A. L. (2022) Does structural change in the zooplankton community affect larval fish feeding in anthropogenically disturbed tropical waters? Environmental Biology of Fishes, 105 (1). pp. 55-76. ISSN 0378-1909, DOI https://doi.org/10.1007/s10641-021-01189-2 <https://doi.org/10.1007/s10641-021-01189-2>. 10.1007/s10641-021-01189-2
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic GC Oceanography
GE Environmental Sciences
QK Botany
spellingShingle GC Oceanography
GE Environmental Sciences
QK Botany
Quah, W. C.
Chew, L. L.
Chong, Ving Ching
Chu, Cecilia
Teoh, C. Y.
Ooi, A. L.
Does structural change in the zooplankton community affect larval fish feeding in anthropogenically disturbed tropical waters?
description Anthropogenic perturbations and climate change have altered the zooplankton community structure in the Klang Strait during the past 30 years, in that the taxa of large-bodied crustaceans (Acartiidae, Calanidae, Pseudodiaptomidae) are being replaced by those of small-bodied crustaceans (Oithonidae, Ectinosomatidae), gelatinous jellyfish, and appendicularians. Since zooplankton constitutes the main larval food, we questioned: have bottom-up effects impacted larval fish feeding via the food chain? Larval fish that were sampled previously (1985-1986) and nearly three decades thereafter (2013-2014) were analysed for their dietary composition. Despite the dramatic replacements of zooplankton taxa due to escalating anthropogenic disturbances, the dominant copepod families, Paracalanidae, Oithonidae and Euterpinidae, remain the major prey for fish larvae. Dietary shifts in prey composition from before to after impact depend on the larval fish family and their ontogenetic stage. Dietary changes are observed in the Bregmacerotidae, Engraulidae, Gobiidae and Sciaenidae that opportunistically feed on the small-bodied copepods (oithonids and Parvocalanus crassirostris), whereas the Callionymidae, Clupeidae and Cynoglossidae naturally feed on these copepods even before these prey become numerically dominant with anthropogenic disturbance. There is no dietary shift in the Leiognathidae, exceptional in that they are specialists feeding mainly on detritus and polychaete larvae. Since the bottom-up effects are not comprehensive among fish families and dietary plasticity is evident, it is postulated that only the intolerant or non-adaptable larval species are adversely affected by the environmental perturbations.
format Article
author Quah, W. C.
Chew, L. L.
Chong, Ving Ching
Chu, Cecilia
Teoh, C. Y.
Ooi, A. L.
author_facet Quah, W. C.
Chew, L. L.
Chong, Ving Ching
Chu, Cecilia
Teoh, C. Y.
Ooi, A. L.
author_sort Quah, W. C.
title Does structural change in the zooplankton community affect larval fish feeding in anthropogenically disturbed tropical waters?
title_short Does structural change in the zooplankton community affect larval fish feeding in anthropogenically disturbed tropical waters?
title_full Does structural change in the zooplankton community affect larval fish feeding in anthropogenically disturbed tropical waters?
title_fullStr Does structural change in the zooplankton community affect larval fish feeding in anthropogenically disturbed tropical waters?
title_full_unstemmed Does structural change in the zooplankton community affect larval fish feeding in anthropogenically disturbed tropical waters?
title_sort does structural change in the zooplankton community affect larval fish feeding in anthropogenically disturbed tropical waters?
publisher Springer
publishDate 2022
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/33679/
_version_ 1739828469442805760
score 13.211869