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Explaining diet composition of North Sea cod (Gadus morhua): prey size preference vs. prey availability
Floeter, J.; Temming, A. (2003). Explaining diet composition of North Sea cod (Gadus morhua): prey size preference vs. prey availability. Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci. 60(2): 140-150. https://dx.doi.org/10.1139/F03-007
In: Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences = Journal canadien des sciences halieutiques et aquatiques. National Research Council Canada: Ottawa. ISSN 0706-652X; e-ISSN 1205-7533, more
Peer reviewed article  

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Keywords
    Abundance
    ANE, North Sea
    Aquatic organisms > Marine organisms > Fish > Marine fish
    Behaviour > Feeding behaviour
    Diets
    Dimensions > Size
    Food consumption
    Interspecific relationships > Predation > Prey selection
    Predator prey interactions
    Stomach content
    Gadus morhua Linnaeus, 1758 [WoRMS]
    North Sea [Marine Regions]
    Marine/Coastal

Authors  Top 
  • Floeter, J., correspondent
  • Temming, A.

Abstract
    The nature and significance of size preference for fish prey in the diet selection of North Sea cod (Gadus morhua L.) was analysed. The analysis combined information on size-specific abundance derived from bottom trawl surveys with prey size frequencies in cod stomachs from the International North Sea Stomach Database. To estimate the abundance of all potential fish prey in the sea, a length-based number spectrum was calculated, corrected for gear efficiency by the application of a species-specific correction factor, and weighted by local predator abundance to take the spatial-temporal overlap between cod and its prey into consideration. A prey size preference model for cod feeding on fish is presented. Results showed that the preferred predator-to-prey weight ratio is an exponentially increasing function of predator size and an exponentially decreasing function of the slope of the number spectrum. More than 75% of fish found in the stomachs of North Sea cod originated from the least preferred quartile of the prey size range, indicating that prey abundance is the main determinant of the diet composition.

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