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A field observation of rotational feeding by Neogobius melanostomus.


ABSTRACT: Neogobius melanostomus, the round goby, was recorded by underwater video feeding on crushed dreissenid mussels at a depth of 12 m in Georgian Bay of Lake Huron, a Laurentian Great Lake. In the video, gobies used rotational or twist feeding to tear away particles from crushed mussels. At least 43 examples of this feeding maneuver occur in the video. Up to 120 gobies m-2 were visible at a time in the video. Mean standard length of gobies appearing in the video was 37 mm. Mean standard length of fish exhibiting twist feeding was larger, 48 mm. Mean size of intact mussels in visible clusters was about 10×20 mm, a size which exceeds the gape width of the largest gobies observed in the video. Neogobius melanostomus is known to use twisting to wrest small attached mussels from the substrates which can be crushed by their pharyngeal teeth. I surmise that the behavior observed in the video is an opportunistic manifestation of this inherent behavioral adaptation to overcome gap limitation and exploit a temporary windfall of food.

SUBMITTER: Angradi TR 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5903586 | biostudies-literature | 2018 Jan

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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A field observation of rotational feeding by <i>Neogobius melanostomus</i>.

Angradi Ted R TR  

Fishes 20180101 1


<i>Neogobius melanostomus</i>, the round goby, was recorded by underwater video feeding on crushed dreissenid mussels at a depth of 12 m in Georgian Bay of Lake Huron, a Laurentian Great Lake. In the video, gobies used rotational or twist feeding to tear away particles from crushed mussels. At least 43 examples of this feeding maneuver occur in the video. Up to 120 gobies m<sup>-2</sup> were visible at a time in the video. Mean standard length of gobies appearing in the video was 37 mm. Mean sta  ...[more]

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