Search results for "Red mullet"

showing 2 items of 12 documents

Sizing up the role of predators on Mullus barbatus populations in Mediterranean trawl and no-trawl areas

2019

Abstract Fishing leads to drastic changes in ecosystems with a net loss of predatory biomass. This issue has been evidenced from historical ecological studies and from the evaluation of the effects of effective and large marine protected areas. In two fishery reserves off the northern Sicily coast the red mullet Mullus barbatus underwent an impressive biomass increment and a few piscivores fish species recovered after a trawl ban. The red mullet, more than 20% of all demersal fish in the untrawled areas, represented a huge food resource to its potential predators. By contrasting two trawled and two untrawled gulfs we figured out predator - prey relationships through the use of a combined ap…

Settore BIO/07 - Ecologia0106 biological sciencesMullus barbatusRed mulletBiomass (ecology)Stable isotope analysibiology010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyMullus barbatu04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesAquatic Sciencebiology.organism_classification01 natural sciencesLophius budegassaFisheryDemersal fishEpinephelus aeneusMediterranean SeaTrawling ban040102 fisheries0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesMarine protected area14. Life underwaterPredator-prey interactionTrophic levelFisheries Research
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Diel feeding habits of juveniles of Mullus surmuletus (Linneo, 1758) in the lagoon of the Stagnone di Marsala (Western Sicily, Italy)

1999

Diet composition, feeding rhythm, gastric evacuation rate and daily ration were investigated in juvenile Mulhis surmuletus (Linneo, 1758). Fish were collected in the lagoon of the Stagnone di Marsala in western Sicily, in July 1995, during a 24 h sampling period. Copepoda, Polychaeta, Amphipoda and Tanaidacea were shown to be the most frequent prey items. The feeding index values showed two different daily feeding times. A unimodal trend in the daily rhythm of food consumption was derived, with a peak in feeding between 1200 and 2000 h. Gastric evacuation in juvenile M. surmuletus is best described by an exponential model, with a gastric evacuation rate R = 0.66 g h-1 (r = 0.88) (T = 24.45 …

Settore BIO/07 - EcologiaAmphipodaMullus surmuletusbiologydiet composition feeding rhythm gastric evacuation rate daily ration food consumption striped red mullet Mediterranean SeaFood consumptionAquatic Sciencebiology.organism_classificationPredationFisheryAnimal scienceDry weightJuvenileDiel vertical migrationTanaidacea
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