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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Knowledge of trophic interactions between the key components of marine communities is required to understand
food-web dynamics and develop ecosystem-based management approaches. In West Africa, where fisheries sustain the
livelihoods of a significant part of the human population, this understanding is even more urgent, especially in the face
of rapidly expanding fisheries and some stock collapses in the region. We studied the feeding ecology of the Crevalle
jack Caranx hippos, West African Spanish mackerel Scomberomorus tritor and Guinean barracuda Sphyraena afra in
the Bijagós Archipelago, Guinea-Bissau. These are the most abundant pelagic predatory teleost fishes in the area, but
little is known about their ecology despite being species with commercial and recreational value, and they likely also
play an important role in various African coastal ecosystems. Our findings show a high degree of dietary overlap among
these three predator species, despite some degree of segregation by prey size and type. All three predators depend on
Sardinella maderensis as the most important prey, which together with other members of the Clupeidae represented
47–96% of the ingested prey items. There was little difference in the diets of the predators between the dry and rainy
seasons. These novel findings suggest a ‘wasp-waist’-structured ecosystem in the Bijagós Archipelago in which S.
maderensis is the central small-sized pelagic fish species, and stress the need for an ecosystem-based approach to
fisheries management in the region, with precautionary measures taken to avoid the overexploitation of clupeids.
Description
Material suplementar disponível em http://dx.doi.org/10.2989/1814232X.2017.1387605
Keywords
Caranx hippos Clupeids Predator–prey Sardinella maderensis Scomberomorus tritor Sphyraena afra Trophic interactions Wasp-waist ecosystem West Africa
Citation
African Journal of Marine Science, 39, 389-396. Doi: 10.2989/1814232X.2017.1387605
Publisher
National Inquiry Services Centre