Title of article
Diet overlap between harbour porpoise and bottlenose dolphin: An argument in favour of interference competition for food?
Author/Authors
Jérôme Spitz، نويسنده , , Yann Rousseau، نويسنده , , Vincent Ridoux، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
12
From page
259
To page
270
Abstract
In aquatic ecosystems, competitive interactions are occasionally described. Violent attacks on harbour porpoises by bottlenose dolphins were
reported and it was proposed that this behavior could result from competitive interactions for food. This hypothesis implies that the two predators
should share all or part of they prey range. In this work, we describe the diets of each predator in the Bay of Biscay and adjacent areas from
stomach content analysis of stranded animals. The diet of the harbour porpoise was mostly composed of small schooling fish living close to the
seafloor (98 percent by mass). The diet of the bottlenose dolphin was characterised by the presence of large specimens of demersal fish (91
percent by mass) and cephalopods. Several prey species are common in the two diets and even the length distributions of some of them,
such as sardine or scads, are very similar. However, global indices such as the Mantel test or the Pianka’s index indicate no or weak overlap.
The dietary results suggest that the two predators show partial dietary overlap over several major dimensions of the foraging niche: prey profile,
foraging habitats, prey species and size range. We suggest interference competition is plausible at the scale of a prey school that would be exploited
jointly by groups of the two predators.
Keywords
interference competition , top predator , Tursiops truncatus , North-Eastern Atlantic , Phocoena phocoena , diet
Journal title
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Record number
953882
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