Feeding by the sand crab Portunus pelagicus on material discarded from prawn trawlers in Moreton Bay,Australia |
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Authors: | T. J. Wassenberg B. J. Hill |
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Affiliation: | (1) Division of Fisheries Research, CSIRO, P.O. Box 120, 4163 Cleveland, Queensland, Australia |
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Abstract: | A field and laboratory study in 1984–1985 using the foregut contents of crabs caught in Moreton Bay, Queensland, when trawling was underway, showed that animals discarded from trawls constituted about 33% of the diet. Portunus pelagicus can fill its foregut in about 8 min and clear it completely of tissues in about 6 h, except for fish bone which requires about 24 h. P. pelagicus used a zigzag search pattern to find food and moved towards it at a mean point-to-point speed of 290 m h-1 (8 cm s-1). Underwater still photography on the trawl grounds showed that P. pelagicus was the most common scavenger attracted to a bait that simulated trawl-discards, and that it was most active at dusk. Trawler-discards at periods of high food demand in summer may allow larger populations of P. pelagicus to exist than would otherwise occur. |
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