Abstract

Stomach contents of anadromous alewives, Alosa pseudoharengus and blueback herring, A. aestivalis, obtained from brush weir and drift net collections in Minas Basin, N.S., were examined. Diets showed much overlap in terms of resource use, but the dietary importance of major prey categories differed substantially between species. Alewives favoured larger, more benthic prey (e.g. amphipods, mysids and crangonids), while blueback herring appeared to concentrate their feeding on microzooplankters (e.g. calanoid copepods, cypris larvae and molluscan veligers). Interspecific differences in diet composition are largely attributed to the planktivorous feeding habits of small (81–155 mm fork length) blueback herring. Differences in prey suggest that alewives utilize a particulate feeding strategy while blueback herring are predominantly filter-feeders. Although competition for food in the Basin seems unlikely since high secondary production yields a superabundance of prey, differences in feeding behaviour between younger, smaller individuals of both species could be a means of avoiding competitive interactions in an environment where there are space/access limitations imposed by the tidal cycle.

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