Morphological-dietary relationships within two assemblages of marine demersal fishes
1998
In this study we have used morphological characters related to feeding and prey capture and dietary data to investigate the trophic organization within two assemblages of marine demersal fishes. Morphological and dietary disparities within fish assemblages were estimated from species similarities based on Euclidean distances plus species projections on the principal axes from multivariate analyses. The analyses of the morphological variables indicated that species in each assemblage comprised morphologically distinct groups strongly influenced by trophically linked characters. Stomach content analyses revealed that fish species in each assemblage were classified into three basic feeding groups: polychaete-shrimp feeders, crab feeders and fish feeders. These results indicated that food resource partitioning was operating within each assemblage. However, when morphological and trophic data were compared no significant correlations were found. The results did not particularly support the ecomorphological hypothesis that dietary differences are due to morphological differences, since similar diets do not correspond to similar morphologies. The patterns of trophic organization within the fish assemblages examined, possibly reflect differences among species due not only to the effect of ecological demands on morphology but also by their evolutionary history and constructional constraints imposed by phylogeny.
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