Abstract

The influence of the food content and the particle size of the substratum on the distribution and relative abundance of Metapenaeus macleayi (Haswell) has been investigated by periodic trawl sampling for prawns and laboratory studies of their food, feeding, and burrowing behaviour. M. macleayi are opportunistic omnivores; they pick up material from the bottom with their chelipeds and convey it to the mouthparts where edible matter is sorted and ingested. They burrow into the sediment with their pereopods and pleopods, and are usually totally buried beneath the surface. A respiratory water current enters a tube formed by the antennal scales and the antennules, flows over the gills and then out of the carapace; this current is regularly reversed with increased strength, presumably to carry away de-oxygenated water. The results of experiments on substratum preference with adequately nourished juveniles suggest that the particle size of the sediment is more important than the food in the substratum in determining the distribution; the apparent preference of juveniles for a fine sandy substratum both in the laboratory and in the natural habitat may be attributed to the minimum threshold velocity of the sand particles. Adults are most abundant in turbid coastal waters arising from estuarine discharge and here the size of the sediment particles appears to be less important than the food content of the substratum in determining the distribution. The mangrove and reed swamps in the Hunter region play an important rôle in the food requirements of juvenile and adult prawns.

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