Trophic guild structure and dietary patterns of a juvenile-dominated demersal fish community in a tropical mangrove estuarine system

Understanding of food web dynamics in species-rich tropical estuaries are generally lacking, exacerbating the challenges of managing these valuable coastal habitats. To address this gap, trophic guilds and dietary patterns were elucidated for 39 species of a juvenile-dominated demersal estuarine fis...

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Main Authors: Then, Amy Yee-Hui, Chong, Ving Ching
Format: Article
Published: Rosenstiel Sch Maratmos Sci 2022
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/41234/
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spelling my.um.eprints.412342023-09-14T08:21:34Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/41234/ Trophic guild structure and dietary patterns of a juvenile-dominated demersal fish community in a tropical mangrove estuarine system Then, Amy Yee-Hui Chong, Ving Ching GE Environmental Sciences Understanding of food web dynamics in species-rich tropical estuaries are generally lacking, exacerbating the challenges of managing these valuable coastal habitats. To address this gap, trophic guilds and dietary patterns were elucidated for 39 species of a juvenile-dominated demersal estuarine fish community in the Matang Mangrove Forest Reserve, an Important Marine Mammal Area. Fishes were sampled monthly for a year using otter trawl, and stomach contents were analyzed. Of the seven trophic guilds identified from clustering analysis, the three most speciose ones were shrimp feeders (12 species), zooplanktivores (9), and generalist crustacivores (7). Copepods occurred in diets of 50% of all fish species and were the most important food item volumetrically for specialist zooplanktivores. Diverse shrimp and prawn taxa, including commercially valuable Acetes and juvenile penaeids, showed highest frequency of occurrence in stomachs and supported the shrimp feeder and crustacivore guilds that contained relatively more diet generalists. Biomass-dominant annelidivore guild members are known to be a vital food resource for highly threatened coastal cetaceans. Ontogenetic diet shift, wide intra-guild diet breadth, seasonality in major resource use, and prevalence of detritus in diet were feeding strategies that reduced niche overlap and competition among fish species sharing common food resources. Future fisheries management must consider the bottom-up trophic impacts from excessive removal of valuable prey resources such as shrimps on equally valuable fish consumers that depend on them. Rosenstiel Sch Maratmos Sci 2022-07 Article PeerReviewed Then, Amy Yee-Hui and Chong, Ving Ching (2022) Trophic guild structure and dietary patterns of a juvenile-dominated demersal fish community in a tropical mangrove estuarine system. Bulletin of Marine Science, 98 (3). pp. 271-295. ISSN 0007-4977, DOI https://doi.org/10.5343/bms.2022.0001 <https://doi.org/10.5343/bms.2022.0001>. 10.5343/bms.2022.0001
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 GE Environmental Sciences
spellingShingle GE Environmental Sciences
Then, Amy Yee-Hui
Chong, Ving Ching
Trophic guild structure and dietary patterns of a juvenile-dominated demersal fish community in a tropical mangrove estuarine system
description Understanding of food web dynamics in species-rich tropical estuaries are generally lacking, exacerbating the challenges of managing these valuable coastal habitats. To address this gap, trophic guilds and dietary patterns were elucidated for 39 species of a juvenile-dominated demersal estuarine fish community in the Matang Mangrove Forest Reserve, an Important Marine Mammal Area. Fishes were sampled monthly for a year using otter trawl, and stomach contents were analyzed. Of the seven trophic guilds identified from clustering analysis, the three most speciose ones were shrimp feeders (12 species), zooplanktivores (9), and generalist crustacivores (7). Copepods occurred in diets of 50% of all fish species and were the most important food item volumetrically for specialist zooplanktivores. Diverse shrimp and prawn taxa, including commercially valuable Acetes and juvenile penaeids, showed highest frequency of occurrence in stomachs and supported the shrimp feeder and crustacivore guilds that contained relatively more diet generalists. Biomass-dominant annelidivore guild members are known to be a vital food resource for highly threatened coastal cetaceans. Ontogenetic diet shift, wide intra-guild diet breadth, seasonality in major resource use, and prevalence of detritus in diet were feeding strategies that reduced niche overlap and competition among fish species sharing common food resources. Future fisheries management must consider the bottom-up trophic impacts from excessive removal of valuable prey resources such as shrimps on equally valuable fish consumers that depend on them.
format Article
author Then, Amy Yee-Hui
Chong, Ving Ching
author_facet Then, Amy Yee-Hui
Chong, Ving Ching
author_sort Then, Amy Yee-Hui
title Trophic guild structure and dietary patterns of a juvenile-dominated demersal fish community in a tropical mangrove estuarine system
title_short Trophic guild structure and dietary patterns of a juvenile-dominated demersal fish community in a tropical mangrove estuarine system
title_full Trophic guild structure and dietary patterns of a juvenile-dominated demersal fish community in a tropical mangrove estuarine system
title_fullStr Trophic guild structure and dietary patterns of a juvenile-dominated demersal fish community in a tropical mangrove estuarine system
title_full_unstemmed Trophic guild structure and dietary patterns of a juvenile-dominated demersal fish community in a tropical mangrove estuarine system
title_sort trophic guild structure and dietary patterns of a juvenile-dominated demersal fish community in a tropical mangrove estuarine system
publisher Rosenstiel Sch Maratmos Sci
publishDate 2022
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/41234/
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score 13.160551