Abstract

AbstractIndividual specialization is a common phenomenon throughout the animal kingdom. Many studies have identified intraspecific competition as one of the main drivers for individual feeding specialization. These studies have mainly considered the quantity of resources, commonly overlooking qualitative aspects of the diet. For example, highly unsaturated fatty acids of the ω‐3 class (ω‐3 HUFAs) are related to optimal health and growth in consumers. However, little is known on direct fitness consequences for consumers of natural populations that specialize on high‐quality resources, such as those rich in ω‐3 HUFAs. Despite being such an important qualitative aspect of the diet, it is still unknown whether natural populations show among‐individual variation in their choice on prey items that are either rich or poor in HUFAs, and how it affects individual performances. In this study, we investigated whether there is individual feeding specialization and whether it is related to fitness benefits, in a population of perch (Perca fluviatilis) in the Baltic Sea. The contribution of pelagic planktivorous fish to the diet varied from 17% to 61% among perch individuals, as depicted by stable isotope mixing models. This variation in diet was also qualitative, as the ω‐3 HUFA content differed among prey types. Specialization on the high‐quality resource pelagic planktivorous fish was associated with the proportions of ω‐3 HUFA in the individuals’ muscles and individuals among those with the highest proportions of ω‐3 HUFAs had the greatest relative gonad weight (gonadosomatic index, GSI), a proxy for reproductive investment. Thus, our results highlight the function of food quality for individual specialization and its potential to have direct fitness benefits, playing a major role in shaping ecological interactions.

Highlights

  • In their common quest for resources, individuals within a population may differ in their specialization on specific prey items, and such variation in resource use have been found even among individuals of a given age and sex (Araujo et al 2011)

  • We hypothesized that individual specialists feeding on pelagic planktivorous fish would have a higher proportion x-3 highly unsaturated fatty acids (HUFAs) in their muscle tissue and a higher gonadosomatic index (GSI)

  • The contribution of pelagic planktivorous fish to the diet of perch varied between 16.7% (95% Bayesian credibility interval [CI] 3.5– 37.2%) and 60.7

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

In their common quest for resources, individuals within a population may differ in their specialization on specific prey items, and such variation in resource use have been found even among individuals of a given age and sex (Araujo et al 2011). We studied the extent of individual specialization on diets with different quality and its relation to fitness benefits, in a population of Eurasian perch (Perca fluviatilis) located in the Forsmark area of the Baltic Sea. Perch is a wellstudied example showing individual diet variations in natural conditions. Less is known about diet specialization of perch in the Baltic Sea, but there is some evidence indicating that the use of resources differs between pelagic and littoral perch (Mustam€aki et al 2014) Whether this reflects individual specialization or is an effect of opportunistic feeding on spatially variable resources is unclear. Perch in the Baltic Sea provides an excellent study system to understand the direct implications of individual specialization and diet quality on fitness in natural populations. We hypothesized that individual specialists feeding on pelagic planktivorous fish (that are rich in x-3 HUFAs) would have a higher proportion x-3 HUFAs in their muscle tissue and a higher GSI

MATERIAL AND METHODS
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