Diet of Juvenile Lumpsucker Cyclopterus lumpus (Cyclopteridae) in Floating Seaweed: Effects of Ontogeny and Prey Availability
We studied the feeding ecology of juvenile lumpsuckers, Cyclopterus lumpus, during their first year in natural floating seaweed clumps and experimental floating seaweed branches, in southwest Iceland. The juveniles appeared to ignore sessile, slow-moving, and small animals (e.g., ostracods, bivalves, gastropods, oligochaetes, polychaetes, turbellarians, rotifers, and nematodes), while taking most other prey organisms in approximate proportion to availability. Juvenile lumpsuckers in floating seaweed fed mainly on prey organisms found on the seaweed but also consumed organisms from the plankton. Ontogenetic changes in the diet were related to size of prey. Lumpsuckers began to feed while they still had some yolk, primarily on small prey, including crustacean larvae and halacarid mites. After they completely absorbed their yolk, juveniles first fed largely on harpacticoids, but amphipods, isopods, and smaller juvenile lumpsuckers formed an increasing proportion of their diet as they grew. Behavioral selection of prey, rather than an increasing ability to ingest larger items, is suggested to be the basis for ontogenetic changes in diet.Abstract

Relationship between selected prey and prey availability in natural and experimental algal clumps. Mollusks, oligochaetes, polychaetes, and nematodes, often abundant in algal clumps but rarely taken as prey, have been omitted from the analysis. Only the more common taxa are labeled. A = Amphipoda, C = Calanoida, Cl = Cladocera, H = Harpacticoida, Ha = Halacarida, I = Insecta, P = Pisces

The proportions, expressed as percentages of the total number of items in stomachs, of three taxa taken by young lumpsuckers of varying total length obtained in natural (397 juveniles) and experimental (152 juveniles) seaweed clumps. The lines are fitted by distance weighted least squares (DWLS in SYSTAT®), tension = 0.75