Feeding habits and seasonal trophic guilds structuring fish community in the bay mouth region of a tropical estuarine habitat

J Fish Biol. 2021 Oct;99(4):1430-1445. doi: 10.1111/jfb.14851. Epub 2021 Aug 17.

Abstract

Understanding trophic relationships of fish in estuarine ecosystem is an important element for sustainable resource management. This study examined the feeding habits of 29 dominant fish species, characterized the trophic guilds, assessed the impact of season and clarified the role of diets in structuring the fish community in the mouth region of Pattani Bay, Thailand. Samples of 5792 fishes collected monthly by gillnets from March 2019 to February 2020 were used for stomach content analyses. It was found that the number of food types and fullness index differed between fish taxa (P < 0.001). Most fishes were specialist feeders feeding on specific food components and were categorized into five trophic guilds: piscivore, shrimp-fish feeder, polychaete feeder, zooplanktivore and planktivore. Six species were piscivorous, considered as apex predators, that fed almost entirely on fishes. High diet overlaps among some species (>0.6) were recorded. Not much variation in seasonal guilds was observed: four guilds in the dry season, three in the moderate rainy season and four in the rainy season. Some species remained in the same guild the whole year round, but some fishes changed seasonally. Two fish communities from different regions of the bay were segregated based on feeding habits. The inner bay community comprised mainly copepod and plankton feeders, but there were more piscivores in the deeper bay mouth area. Results from this study help us to understand the feeding habits and trophic guilds of dominant fish species at the mouth of this tropical estuarine bay.

Keywords: Gulf of Thailand; fish ecology; stomach content; trophic organization; tropical estuary.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Bays
  • Copepoda*
  • Ecosystem*
  • Feeding Behavior
  • Fishes
  • Food Chain
  • Habits
  • Seasons