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Recherches sur la situation trophique d'un groupe d'organismes pélagiques (Euphausiacea). V. Relations avec les thons
Authors:C. Roger
Affiliation:1. Centre O.R.S.T.O.M., Nouméa, New Caledonia
Abstract:The examination of stomach contents of large subsurface tunas caught by long-line fishing, as well as of those of micronektonic fishes which they had eaten, allows us to assess the role played by euphausiids in food webs concerning these fishes. Long-line tunas do not utilize euphausiids as food because, in the tropical Pacific Ocean, their feeding activity is restricted to light hours, i.e., to a time when large euphausiids which could serve as potential prey, occupy deeper (below 400 m) water layers. Euphausiids constitute approximately 10% of the total food ingested by epipelagic micronektonic fishes which, in turn, are preyed upon by tunas; these fishes, measuring usually 30 to 60 mm in total length, are fast swimmers and are rarely collected by pelagic trawls. Among this ichthyofauna, the main predators of euphausiids appear to be Gempylidae (Diplospinus multistriatus), Paralepididae, and Bramidae (Collybus, Taractes, Pteraclis). Euphausiids ingested by these fishes chiefly belong to the genera Stylocheiron (64%) and Nematoscelis (15%). This means that the fishes which serve as prey for tunas are able to utilize for food only organisms which inhabit subsurface (0 to 400 m) layers during daytime and not those (Euphausia, Thysanopoda) which remain at this time in the deeper layers and rise to the subsurface only at night. Therefore, these fishes, like tunas themselves, appear to display their main feeding activity in the 0 to 400 m water layer and during daytime.
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