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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
As an inhabitant of the intertidal zone, Nerophis
lumbriciformis predictably should show a clear
rhythmic activity, with its maximum closely correlated
with the high tide period, as observed in several other
rocky intertidal fish species. We investigated the rhythmic
activity patterns of N. lumbriciformis and analysed
to what extent specific substratum preferences may be
linked to water level and, ultimately, to the particular activity
rhythm patterns of the fish. To determine N. lumbriciformis
substratum preferences, two different experiments
were conducted. The first evaluated substratum
preferences from among a group of the four most common
substrates found in the sample area. The second experiment
evaluated the fish’s maintenance of that substratum
preference, after alteration of the water level in a
simulated ebb tide. From the available substrata, N. lumbriciformis
displayed a clear preference for algae until
the water level began to decrease. Then, the preference
radically shifted from algae to boulders. N. lumbriciformis
showed a clear rhythmic activity, affected by both
tidal and circadian periodicity, producing asymmetrical
activity peaks. Unlike the rhythms of other rocky intertidal
fish species, the maximum activity peaks were not
centred at the expected high tide period. The adaptive
explanation for the apparently peculiar activity peaks appears
to be related to the particular substratum preferences
of N. lumbriciformis. The detected circatidal period
seems, consequently, closely related to small migrations
between substrata, whilst the observed increase in diurnal
activity, independent of the tidal cycle, may be related to
predatory activity, since N. lumbriciformis is a visual
feeder.
Description
Keywords
Nerophis lumbriciformis Rhythmic activity Syngnathidae Substratum preference
Citation
Acta Ethologica, 5, 39-43