School of Marine and Tropical Biology, James Cook University, Townsville, QLD, 4811, Australia.
Oecologia. 2013 Jun;172(2):409-16. doi: 10.1007/s00442-012-2521-7. Epub 2012 Nov 4.
Most animals consume a narrower range of food resources than is potentially available in the environment, but the underlying basis for these preferences is often poorly understood. Foraging theory predicts that prey selection should represent a trade-off between prey preferences based on nutritional value and prey availability. That is, species should consume preferred prey when available, but select less preferred prey when preferred prey is rare. We employed both field observation and laboratory experiments to examine the relationship between prey selection and preferences in the obligate coral-feeding filefish, Oxymonacanthus longirostris. To determine the drivers of prey selection, we experimentally established prey preferences in choice arenas and tested the consequences of prey preferences for key fitness-related parameters. Field studies showed that individuals fed almost exclusively on live corals from the genus Acropora. While diet was dominated by the most abundant species, Acropora nobilis, fish appeared to preferentially select rarer acroporids, such as A. millepora and A. hyacinthus. Prey choice experiments confirmed strong preferences for these corals, suggesting that field consumption is constrained by availability. In a longer-term feeding experiment, reproductive pairs fed on non-preferred corals exhibited dramatic reductions to body weight, and in hepatic and gonad condition, compared with those fed preferred corals. The majority of pairs fed preferred corals spawned frequently, while no spawning was observed for any pairs fed a non-preferred species of coral. These experiments suggest that fish distinguish between available corals based on their intrinsic value as prey, that reproductive success is dependent on the presence of particular coral species, and that differential loss of preferred corals could have serious consequences for the population success of these dietary specialists.
大多数动物消耗的食物资源范围比环境中潜在的要窄,但这些偏好的基础往往理解得很差。觅食理论预测,猎物选择应该在基于营养价值的猎物偏好和猎物可获得性之间进行权衡。也就是说,当有可用的猎物时,物种应该消耗偏好的猎物,但当偏好的猎物稀缺时,应选择不太偏好的猎物。我们采用现场观察和实验室实验来研究专性珊瑚食性的条纹镰鱼(Oxymonacanthus longirostris)的猎物选择与偏好之间的关系。为了确定猎物选择的驱动因素,我们在选择竞技场中进行了实验性的猎物偏好,并测试了猎物偏好对关键与健康相关的参数的影响。现场研究表明,个体几乎完全以鹿角珊瑚属(Acropora)的活珊瑚为食。虽然饮食以最丰富的物种,即 Acropora nobilis 为主,但鱼类似乎优先选择较稀有的鹿角珊瑚,如 A. millepora 和 A. hyacinthus。猎物选择实验证实了对这些珊瑚的强烈偏好,表明野外摄食受到可获得性的限制。在一项长期的喂养实验中,与喂食偏好珊瑚的鱼相比,喂食非偏好珊瑚的繁殖对体重、肝脏和性腺状况都出现了明显的下降。大多数喂食偏好珊瑚的鱼频繁产卵,而喂食非偏好珊瑚的鱼则没有产卵。这些实验表明,鱼根据自身作为猎物的内在价值来区分可用的珊瑚,繁殖成功取决于特定珊瑚物种的存在,而偏好珊瑚的差异损失可能对这些饮食专家的种群成功产生严重后果。