Resource Partitioning among "Ancillary" Pelagic Fishes (Scomber spp., Trachurus spp.) in the Adriatic Sea

Biology (Basel). 2023 Feb 8;12(2):272. doi: 10.3390/biology12020272.

Abstract

The Mediterranean is one of the most overfished seas of the world where mesopredators are severely threatened. The trophic strategies of four pelagic species that inhabit the Adriatic Sea (Scomber spp. and Trachurus spp.) were investigated through an integrated approach of stomach contents and stable isotopes analyses. Our study demonstrated that Scomber colias feeds mainly on strictly pelagic prey, with fish larvae as a secondary prey in the Southern Adriatic Sea, while S. scombrus feeds on prey belonging to higher trophic levels. Smaller specimens of Trachurus mediterraneus have a diet mainly based on pelagic prey, while larger fishes rely on prey such as benthic decapods, showing an ontogenetic shift in the diet of the species. Trachurus trachurus shows a preference for offshore and deeper areas and a diet such as that of its congeneric, but no clear ontogenetic shift was observed. This spatial segregation allows the co-existence of these two species of Trachurus. Scomber colias mainly inhabits southern areas and S. scombrus shows a preference for the northern sectors. This latitudinal gradient avoids the overlap of their trophic niches. Bayesian mixing models confirmed that the trophic niches of these species only partially overlap in the middle of the trophic web.

Keywords: Atlantic chub mackerel; Atlantic horse mackerel; Atlantic mackerel; MEDIAS; Mediterranean Sea; Mediterranean horse mackerel; pelagic food web; stable isotopes; stomach contents.

Grants and funding

The study was largely supported by the MEDIAS (www.medias-project.eu/medias/website, accessed 6 October 2022) research project in the framework of the EC-MIPAAF Italian National Fisheries Data Collection Programs.