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Resource partitioning among early colonizing Siganus luridus and native herbivorous fish in the Mediterranean: an integrated study based on gut-content analysis and stable isotope signatures

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 July 2007

Ernesto Azzurro
Affiliation:
ICRAM, Central Institute for Marine Research, Laboratory of Milazzo, Via dei Mille 44, 98057 Milazzo (ME), Italy
Emanuela Fanelli
Affiliation:
IAMC-CNR, Marine Ecology Laboratory, Via G. Da Verrazzano 17, 91014 Castellammare del Golfo (TP), Italy
Edoardo Mostarda
Affiliation:
ICRAM, Central Institute for Marine Research, Laboratory of Milazzo, Via dei Mille 44, 98057 Milazzo (ME), Italy
Marcello Catra
Affiliation:
Università di Catania, Istituto Botanico e Orto Botanico, Via A. Longo 19, 95125 Catania, Italy
Franco Andaloro
Affiliation:
ICRAM, STS of Palermo, Via E. Amari 124, 90134, Italy

Abstract

The present study attempts to give timely information on the resource partitioning between the lessepsian migrant Siganus luridus and two ecological native analogues, Sarpa salpa and Sparisoma cretense. Sampling was carried out in concomitance with the first record of Siganus luridus in Linosa and fish were caught simultaneously, allowing direct comparison of diets. Gut-contents analyses provided a snapshot of the feeding habits of the three species: Siganus luridus fed on 34 taxa of benthic algae (mostly represented by Dictyota dichotoma) and a total of 27 taxa was identified in the stomach of Sarpa salpa, with the predominance of Sargassum vulgare. For the first time, a detailed picture of Sparisoma cretense diet was given (N=22 taxa of identified algae) albeit, due to the high percentage of digested food, this species was excluded from gut-content comparisons. A certain resource partitioning between Siganus luridus and Sarpa salpa was resolved on the basis of trophic indices and multivariate analyses, these latter also highlighting a more dispersed diet for Siganus luridus with respect to Sarpa salpa. Isotopic signatures were important towards defining the trophic level of the three species and particularly of Sparisoma cretense, whose gut-contents analysis was only partially informative. The values of δ15N confirmed a strictly vegetal diet for Siganus luridus and Sparisoma cretense while Sarpa salpa was significantly more enriched. According to δ13C, observed values matched the predicted ones for Siganus luridus and Sarpa salpa while both species presented less enriched δ15N values than expected.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
2007 Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom

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