Food partitioning is one of the primary mechanisms facilitating the stable co-occurrence of competing species, but very few studies have investigated how food resource use of competing and closely related species varies with life-history stages and habitats. In Lake Erhai (China), the trophic niche of 2 congeneric and co-occurring invasive goby species (Rhinogobius cliffordpopei and R. giurinus) was examined to test the existence of an ontogenetic diet shift and to determine potential differences in trophic niche between species within a habitat and between habitats (i.e. littoral and profundal) within species. Results obtained from gut content and stable isotope analyses revealed a strong trophic niche shift during ontogeny, whereby juveni...
Generalist fish species can feed on a wide resource spectrum and across trophic levels depending on ...
Bighead goby (Neogobius kessleri) and round goby (Neogobius melanostomus) have been inva...
1. Ecological theory attempts to predict how impacts for native species arise from biological invasi...
Niche differentiation facilitates the coexistence of species within a community through avoidance of...
Knowledge of food resource partitioning among sympatric fish species is crucial for understanding th...
Spatial segregation is one of the most important mechanisms that facilitates coexistence among compe...
Foraging behaviour of the common goby, Pomatoschistus microps was investigated in both the United Ki...
Foraging behaviour of the common goby, Pomatoschistus microp s was investigated in both the United K...
Body size and environmental prey availability are both key factors determining feeding habits of gap...
Understanding how omnivorous consumers are affected by their resources and how this is expressed thr...
Species belonging to the same ecological guild can coexist only if there are differences in their re...
The feeding ecology of two sympatric gobies, Favonigobius lentiginosus and Favonigobius exquisitus, ...
Understanding trophic interactions of non-native species is key to elucidating their potential ecolo...
Predatory fish species play a key role in aquatic ecosystems by exerting top-down control on the foo...
<div><p>Body size and environmental prey availability are both key factors determining feeding habit...
Generalist fish species can feed on a wide resource spectrum and across trophic levels depending on ...
Bighead goby (Neogobius kessleri) and round goby (Neogobius melanostomus) have been inva...
1. Ecological theory attempts to predict how impacts for native species arise from biological invasi...
Niche differentiation facilitates the coexistence of species within a community through avoidance of...
Knowledge of food resource partitioning among sympatric fish species is crucial for understanding th...
Spatial segregation is one of the most important mechanisms that facilitates coexistence among compe...
Foraging behaviour of the common goby, Pomatoschistus microps was investigated in both the United Ki...
Foraging behaviour of the common goby, Pomatoschistus microp s was investigated in both the United K...
Body size and environmental prey availability are both key factors determining feeding habits of gap...
Understanding how omnivorous consumers are affected by their resources and how this is expressed thr...
Species belonging to the same ecological guild can coexist only if there are differences in their re...
The feeding ecology of two sympatric gobies, Favonigobius lentiginosus and Favonigobius exquisitus, ...
Understanding trophic interactions of non-native species is key to elucidating their potential ecolo...
Predatory fish species play a key role in aquatic ecosystems by exerting top-down control on the foo...
<div><p>Body size and environmental prey availability are both key factors determining feeding habit...
Generalist fish species can feed on a wide resource spectrum and across trophic levels depending on ...
Bighead goby (Neogobius kessleri) and round goby (Neogobius melanostomus) have been inva...
1. Ecological theory attempts to predict how impacts for native species arise from biological invasi...