
doi: 10.1007/bf00000693
Acara, Geophagus brasiliensis, and red-breasted bream, Tilapia rendalli, are important planktivorous cichlids in southern Brazilian lakes and reservoirs. In laboratory experiments, I quantified behavior and selectivity of different sizes of these two fish feeding on lake zooplankton. Feeding behavior depended on fish size. Fish 70 mm were pump-filter feeders. Replicate 1 h feeding trials revealed that, as the relative proportions of prey changed during an experiment, acara (30–42 mm, standard length) and tilapia (29–42 mm) shifted from visual feeding on large evasive copepods to filter feeding on small cladocerans and rotifers. Electivity and feeding rate increased with prey length, but were distinct for similar-sized cladocerans and copepods. Visual/filter-feeding fish had lowest electivities for small and poorly evasive rotifers and cyclopoid nauplii. They fed non-selectively on cyclopoid copepodites, had intermediate electivities for calanoid nauplii and small cladocerans, and had highest electivities for large cladocerans, cyclopoid adults, and calanoid copepodites and adults. Although belonging to different cichlid genera and native to South America and Africa, respectively, acara and red-breasted bream (= congo tilapia) exhibited similar selectivity for zooplankton. Apparently, few stereotyped feeding behaviors have evolved during the acquisition of microphagy in fish. Shift in feeding modes allows these two species to optimally exploit the variable and dynamic patchy distribution of planktonic resources.
NUTRITION ANIMALE, 570, POISSON D'EAU DOUCE, FILTREUR, CHASSEUR VISUEL, 590, ETUDE COMPARATIVE, PLANCTOPHAGE, ETHOLOGIE, RELATION PREDATEUR PROIE
NUTRITION ANIMALE, 570, POISSON D'EAU DOUCE, FILTREUR, CHASSEUR VISUEL, 590, ETUDE COMPARATIVE, PLANCTOPHAGE, ETHOLOGIE, RELATION PREDATEUR PROIE
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