Abstract
Seasonal and smaller scale temporal variations in the diet of the large predatory grouper Plectropomus leopardus were examined on the central Great Barrier Reef, Australia. In 5 months over a 2-year period, 742 P. leopardus (≥25 cm standard length) were collected for stomach content analysis. Despite intensive sampling, identified prey were spread over 20 families and much of the dietary variation was considered to be stochastic. Most aspects of the diet of P. leopardus did not vary seasonally. Frequency, rates of feeding, and proportion of fish consumed were consistent throughout the study. Size of fish prey did not vary significantly between seasons. Pomacentridae, Caesionidae, Scaridae, and Labridae were four of the five most important prey families consumed and did not vary seasonally in the diet. Prey in the other family, the small-sized schooling Clupeidae, were consumed sporadically among months with no seasonal patterns. One less common prey family variedseasonally in the diet; Synodontidae, which are small voracious predators of fish recruits, were consumed by P. leopardus more in summer than winter. Although the diet of P. leopardus is not influenced by the seasonal influx of small fishes recruiting to reefs, these large piscivores may indirectly improve recruit survival by consuming small and abundant predators of new recruits.
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St. John, J. Temporal variation in the diet of a coral reef piscivore (Pisces: Serranidae) was not seasonal. Coral Reefs 20, 163–170 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1007/s003380100152
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s003380100152