Diet of the amphi-Atlantic scaphopod Fissidentalium candidum in the deep waters of Campos Basin, south-eastern Brazil

Specimens of Fissidentalium candidum collected at Campos Basin, south-eastern Brazil, had their diet investigated in order to assess its feeding habits. Benthic prey exceeded the planktonic ones as expected and Foraminifera constituted the most frequent prey taxa, comprising about 99.5% of the scaph...

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Published inJournal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom Vol. 97; no. 6; pp. 1259 - 1266
Main Authors Dantas, Renato Junqueira De Souza, Laut, Lazaro Luiz Mattos, Caetano, Carlos Henrique Soares
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Cambridge, UK Cambridge University Press 01.09.2017
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Summary:Specimens of Fissidentalium candidum collected at Campos Basin, south-eastern Brazil, had their diet investigated in order to assess its feeding habits. Benthic prey exceeded the planktonic ones as expected and Foraminifera constituted the most frequent prey taxa, comprising about 99.5% of the scaphopod diet; the remaining components included a few molluscs (gastropods, bivalves and scaphopods), a nematode, an ostracod crustacean, fish otoliths, unknown partial organisms and inorganic material (e.g. sediment grains and polymetallic nodules). Amongst the species previously studied, F. candidum stood out by presenting the highest dietary diversity (H = 3.35) and species richness (N = 118). Predator and prey dimensions were not correlated and no spatial variation was observed in the diet amongst the three collection sites in the mid-slope of Campos Basin. Generalism, high rate of rare or unimportant species and high contribution of within-phenotype component to the niche width were important features of the trophic ecology of F. candidum. Inhabiting the deep water of Campos Basin, this dentaliid obtained most of its energy from the benthic microfauna, being a specialized foram predator with moderate preference for, and moderate selection against, several species.
ISSN:0025-3154
1469-7769
DOI:10.1017/S002531541600059X