DIEL MOVEMENTS OF JUVENILE PLAICE PLEURONECTES-PLATESSA IN RELATION TO PREDATORS, COMPETITORS, FOOD AVAILABILITY AND ABIOTIC FACTORS ON A MICROTIDAL NURSERY GROUND

Citation
Rn. Gibson et al., DIEL MOVEMENTS OF JUVENILE PLAICE PLEURONECTES-PLATESSA IN RELATION TO PREDATORS, COMPETITORS, FOOD AVAILABILITY AND ABIOTIC FACTORS ON A MICROTIDAL NURSERY GROUND, Marine ecology. Progress series, 165, 1998, pp. 145-159
Citations number
40
Categorie Soggetti
Marine & Freshwater Biology",Ecology
ISSN journal
01718630
Volume
165
Year of publication
1998
Pages
145 - 159
Database
ISI
SICI code
0171-8630(1998)165:<145:DMOJPP>2.0.ZU;2-I
Abstract
The distribution and movements of juvenile plaice Pleuronectes platess a and their potential predators and competitors were recorded in a sma ll microtidal (similar to 20 cm) bay on the west coast of Sweden using underwater television and conventional netting techniques. There was generally close correspondence between the results obtained by the 2 m ethods. Young plaice moved upshore at dusk and returned to deeper wate r at dawn. Larger predatory fishes also moved upshore at night but not as far as the plaice; they also entered shallow water later and left for deeper water earlier than the plaice. One interpretation of these nocturnal upshore migrations by plaice, therefore, is that they minimi se predation risk. Although stomach fullness was greater at night, the availability of suitable food items for the plaice throughout the bay makes it unlikely that the upshore movements were solely related to f eeding. Because there was a strong diel temperature fluctuation in the bay, such movements also ensured that the fish remained in a fairly c onstant temperature. The main competitor of the plaice for food in Jul y, the shrimp Crangon crangon, showed no such migratory movements and was mostly active during the day. The other dominant large crustacean (Carcinus maenas) was nocturnally active and did not markedly change i ts depth distribution over the 24 h period. The observed patterns of m ovement suggest that the timing of immigration and emigration is mainl y triggered by changes in light intensity because only in C. maenas wa s any relationship found between activity and the phase of the tidal c ycle.