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Trophodynamic effects of trawling on the feeding ecology of pandora, pagellus erythrinus, off the northern sicily coast (Mediterranean Sea)

TitoloTrophodynamic effects of trawling on the feeding ecology of pandora, pagellus erythrinus, off the northern sicily coast (Mediterranean Sea)
Tipo di pubblicazioneArticolo su Rivista peer-reviewed
Anno di Pubblicazione2010
AutoriFanelli, E., Badalamenti F., D'Anna G., Pipitone C., and Romano C.
RivistaMarine and Freshwater Research
Volume61
Paginazione408-417
ISSN13231650
Parole chiaveAbundance, anthropogenic effect, benthos, body size, Brachyuran, Crustacea, crustacean, Decapoda (Crustacea), diet, environmental indicator, feeding ecology, food web, Goneplax rhomboides, Italy, Nutrition, Pagellus erythrinus, perciform, Polychaeta, Polychaete, Sicily, stable isotope, stomach content, trawling, trophic level
Abstract

Because trawling disturbs benthic organisms, it could affect the diet of benthic-feeding fish with implications for food-web dynamics. The present study assessed the effects of commercial trawling on the trophodynamics and diet of pandora, Pagellus erythrinus, by comparing its stomach contents and stable-isotope (Δ15N and 13C) composition in two trawled and two untrawled gulfs in northern Sicily (central Mediterranean). Fish were collected on muddy bottoms at 50100-m depth. Higher abundance and biomass and a slightly larger mean body length were found in the untrawled gulfs. The feeding habits were similar although more selective in the untrawled gulfs. The diet was mainly composed of decapod crustaceans (especially the brachyuran crab Goneplax rhomboides) and of polychaetes. The trophic level of pandora, estimated by its Δ15N values, was higher in the untrawled gulfs. No clear trend between trawled and untrawled gulfs was found for the source of carbon in the diet Δ(13C). The diet of a benthic feeder such as pandora may be used as an indirect indicator of trawling disturbance, as long as stomach contents and stable-isotope analysis are used jointly to assess the diet and trophodynamics of a species. © 2010 CSIRO.

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URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-77951859327&doi=10.1071%2fMF09049&partnerID=40&md5=ac66191fa6322acd6505e13307df3788
DOI10.1071/MF09049
Citation KeyFanelli2010408