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On the biology of the commoner gadoids in Manx waters
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 May 2009
Extract
The food and feeding habits, and general biology of the commoner gadoids in Manx waters have been studied. During the pelagic phase the diet of the gadoids showed a great similarity, consisting mainly of various abundant calanoid copepods. The larger pelagic post-larvae supplemented this basic diet with the inclusion of euphausiid ‘furcilia’ larvae and (in whiting) the amphipod Hyperia. Whiting, cod and pout were often found associated with medusae: the whiting, 21–53 nun long, were taken in large numbers, and their diet was found to be modified as a result of this association.
Young gadoids in a shallow sandy bay showed a great similarity in their basic diets, which typically consisted of various small, swarming mysids, amphipods and isopods. This habitat was a nursery area for many of the gadoids.
The larger fishes fell into two groups: (i) those that were characteristically feeders on the infauna and large, slow-moving epifauna; such fish being provided with stout barbels, well equipped with taste-buds, e.g. cod; (ii) those that feed largely, on the smaller active epifauna and nektonic prey, and possessed no, or only rudimentary, barbels, e.g. whiting.
The larger gadoids showed a concentration after spawning on a shallow, submarine shelf (the Warts Bank) to the south of the Isle of Man. Here the spent fish fed on an abundant and localized food, sand eels. The gadoids were found in this habitat from March to September, and were the object of a local fishery.
There was evidence that the gadoids exercised choice of food from that potentially available from the four primary food sources in each habitat; but if their favourite food was scarce or lacking, they would take substitute food by exploiting sources otherwise normally neglected.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom , Volume 45 , Issue 3 , October 1965 , pp. 615 - 657
- Copyright
- Copyright © Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 1965
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