4.4 Article

Spatial and temporal variation in the diet of the Pacific sand lance Ammodytes hexapterus in waters off the coast of British Columbia, Canada

Journal

JOURNAL OF FISH BIOLOGY
Volume 83, Issue 5, Pages 1094-1111

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jfb.12181

Keywords

copepods; forage fishes; interannual variation; oceanography conditions; prey types

Funding

  1. Environment Canada
  2. Centre for Wildlife Ecology at Simon Fraser University

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Variation in the diet of the Pacific sand lance Ammodytes hexapterus was examined in three years (2009-2011) at four sites in British Columbia, Canada. There were 12 major taxa of prey in diets, eight of which were Crustacea, with copepods being by far the dominant taxon in all 12 site-years. Of the 22 copepod taxa recorded, only Calanus marshallae and Pseudocalanus spp. occurred in all collections, and these two calanoid species dominated diets in terms of frequency of occurrence and total numbers of prey (Pseudocalanus spp. in most collections), and total prey biomass (C. marshallae in all collections). Based on an index of relative importance, C. marshallae was the primary prey at the two southerly sampling sites (Pine and Triangle Islands) and Pseudocalanus spp. at the two northerly sites (Lucy Island and S'Gang Gwaay). Based on an index of dietary overlap, the species composition of the copepod component of A. hexapterus diets overlapped very strongly at the northerly and the southerly pairs of sites in both a cold-water La Nina year (2009) and a warm-water El Nino year (2010), but overall there was more homogeneity amongst all four sites in the La Nina year. (C) 2013 The Fisheries Society of the British Isles

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