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Size-dependent, Spatial, and Temporal Variability of Juvenile Walleye Pollock (Theragra chalcogramma) Feeding at a Structural Front in the Southeast Bering Sea
Authors:Robert Schabetsberger ,Marc Sztatecsny,Gabriele Drozdowski,Richard D. Brodeur,Gordon L. Swartzman,Matthew T. Wilson,reas G. Winter,&   Jeffrey M. Napp
Affiliation: Oregon State University, Cooperative Institute for Marine Resources Studies, Hatfield Marine Science Center, Newport, OR 97365, USA.; University of Vienna, Institute of Zoology, Althanstr. 14, A-1090 Vienna, Austria.; University of Vienna, Institute of Ecology and Conservation Biology, Althanstr. 14, A-1090 Vienna, Austria.; National Marine Fisheries Service, Northwest Fisheries Science Center, Hatfield Marine Science Center, Newport, OR 97365, USA.; Applied Physics Laboratory, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98105, USA.; Alaska Fisheries Science Center, 7600 Sand Point Way NE, Seattle, WA 98115, USA.; School of Aquatic and Fishery Science, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98105, USA.
Abstract:Abstract. The waters surrounding the Pribilof Islands are an important nursery ground for juvenile walleye pollock (Theragra chalcogramma), an important forage fish in the pelagic food web of the productive Bering Sea shelf region. The diet of juvenile pollock was studied in two consecutive years along a transect line crossing from a well‐mixed coastal domain, through a frontal region to stratified water farther offshore. Variability in stomach fullness was high and evidence for increased feeding intensity in the front was weak. Prey diversity and prey size generally increased with increasing fish size, shifting from predominantly small copepods to larger, more evasive prey items such as euphausiids, crab megalopae and fish. The diet of the fish reflected changes in the relative abundance of copepods and euphausiids in the prey fields between years. Juvenile pollock showed increased feeding rates at dusk, and stomach fullness as well as prey condition were generally lowest just before sunrise; however, the proportion of euphausiids increased in the diet of pollock caught at night, suggesting that some food was also ingested during darkness. Juvenile pollock and their euphausiid prey both vertically migrated above the thermocline at night, although each had a different daytime depth.
Keywords:Theragra chalcogramma    walleye pollock    predation    diel feeding    frontal regions    Bering Sea
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