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Feeding ecology of the piscivorous birds Phalacrocorax varius, P. melanoleucos and Sterna bergii in Moreton Bay, Australia: diets and dependence on trawler discards

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Abstract

The diets of three piscivorous bird species from Moreton Bay, Queensland, Australia, were monitored for 14 mo from April 1986 to September 1987. Regurgitated pellets from Phalacrocorax varius (pied cormorant), P. melanoleucos (little pied cormorant) and Sterna bergii (crested tern) were collected monthly and prey items were identified from otoliths, spines and whole-fish remains. Otolith weight to fish length and weight relationships were used to aid in calculation of diet composition. Sepia sp. was the commonest prey of P. varius and P. melanoleucos; Sterna bergii took few Sepia sp. In order of decreasing importance, the teleosts Sillago maculata, Apogon fasciatus and Leiognathus moretoniensis were the next most common prey in all diets. P. melanoleucos has previously been reported to eat primarily crustaceans. The size ranges of fish prey were 18 to 452 mm for P. varius; 25 to 246 mm for P. melanoleucos; and 33 to 226 mm for Serrna bergii. The three species had similarly narrow diets. There was a significant rank correlation between the diet of P. varius and the by-catch of the prawn trawlers. This, together with observations of feeding behaviour, the similarity of the diets and the benthic and benthopelagic nature of most prey species, suggests that in Moreton Bay the three bird species are primarily dependent on food from fishery discards. The population of about 350 P. varius possibly consumes 13.7% of the total fish by-catch. The relationships between the fishery and the piscivorous birds in discussed in relation to size of bird populations and its possible dependence on the fishery.

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Communicated by G. F. Humphrey, Sydney

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Blaber, S.J.M., Wassenberg, T.J. Feeding ecology of the piscivorous birds Phalacrocorax varius, P. melanoleucos and Sterna bergii in Moreton Bay, Australia: diets and dependence on trawler discards. Mar. Biol. 101, 1–10 (1989). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00393473

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