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Fish and Fisheries in Estuaries


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at low prey concentrations (Lasker et al. 1970, Lasker 1975, Hunter 1981, MacKenzie et al. 1994). Mechanisms that increase availability of prey generally depend on a combination of physical processes, e.g. aggregating, concentrating, retaining (Bakun 1996) and larval behaviours that elevate the probability of encounter with prey. In estuaries, aggregating mechanisms and larval behaviour clearly can raise consumption levels and support higher growth rates. It also is now apparent that the high prey concentrations once thought necessary to ensure feeding success by fish larvae in marine systems were in part artefacts resulting from inadequate sampling or unreliable experimental conditions (Peck et al. 2013, Houde 2016). Furthermore, as knowledge of diets and feeding has increased, it is apparent, as noted above, that a wider variety of prey types is available to fish larvae than previously known.

      Larval fishes must consume a ration that constitutes a large fraction of their body weight to account for their reported mean growth rates (Houde & Zastrow 1993). Llopiz (2013) estimated that median feeding incidence (percent of larvae with food in gut) of estuarine fish larvae was ~43%, a value much lower than the >90% median value for coastal and oceanic taxa. However, only 12 studies of feeding incidence by estuarine fish larvae were included in Llopiz's (2013) synthesis and he cautioned that the result might be misleading. In a synthesis of larval feeding data, Houde & Zastrow (1993) reported that the mean, temperature‐adjusted ingestion (i.e. daily ration, percentage of body weight) required for estuarine fish larvae to support mean reported growth rates was 68%, a value higher than the 57% estimated for larvae of all marine fishes. Estuarine fish larvae (and all fish larvae) have a high food demand, typically requiring a daily ration exceeding 50% of body weight, lending support to hypotheses invoking food as an important limiting factor for larval survival.

      Based on Houde & Zastrow's (1993) synthesised data, the across‐taxa, weight‐specific, ingestion (I) versus temperature (T) relationships for marine and estuarine fish larvae are:

upper M a r i n e upper I equals negative 0.0790 plus 0.0364 upper T upper E s t u a r y upper I equals negative 0.0979 plus 0.0407 upper T

      Ontogenetic shifts and feeding success

      Considered in the context of Hjort's (1914) critical period hypothesis, the period between yolk nutrition and transition to exogenous feeding may indeed be a critical time for larvae of estuarine fishes. As noted above, estuarine fish larvae must consume substantial quantities of plankton and require increasing amounts of prey during ontogeny and growth. Both numbers and sizes of prey generally increase as larvae grow, although larvae may continue to include small prey in the diet (Houde 2016). Feeding incidence initially is low but increases as larvae grow and develop, potentially reducing the threat of starvation while supporting fast growth. With increased mouth size, the spectrum of prey types and sizes available for consumption expands. There typically is a direct relationship between size of fish larvae and size of ingested prey (Houde 1997a, Houde 2016).

Schematic illustration of relative lengths of prey (%) and actual lengths of prey (y-axis) consumed by larvae of Anchoa mitchilli in five length bins.

      (modified from Auth 2003 and Houde 2016, his figure 3.26).

Schematic illustration of prey size and niche breadth (defined here with respect to variability in sizes of prey) eaten by larvae of the moronid Morone americana (a, b) and the gobiid Gobiosoma bosc (c, d).

      (derived from Campfield (2004)).

      An increase in niche breadth was clearly observed in the gut analysis of larvae of the clupeid Sprattus sprattus in the Baltic Sea (Peck et al. 2012a and references therein). As larval size increased, prey size also increased and, based on analysis of combined data from different studies (Voss et al. 2003, Dickmann et al. 2007), prey size in S. sprattus increased most rapidly between 10 and 15 mm SL. At