Abstract

Three benthic predators Coris julis, Symphodus cinereus and Mullus surmuletus in a Posidonia oceanica reef lagoon of the Tyrrhenian coast had a broad diet, including hard-bodied invertebrates such as crustaceans and molluscs, but revealed consistent interspecific differences. Diet overlap was greater between C. julis and M. surmuletus in comparison to other combinations. All three species were diurnal feeders, but with diVerent daily patterns of foraging based on diVerent prey availability. There was a general spatio-temporal correlation in non-foraging activity among the three species, but foraging activity was correlated only between C. julis and the other two species, but not between S. cinereus and M. surmuletus .There was heterospecific aggregation during foraging between C. julis and M. surmuletus, and possibly a scrounger–producer relationship between them. Fights between C. julis specimens related to foraging activity were common, but not between species. These results support the view that diVerences in spatio-temporal organization of activity, and interactions during foraging, can contribute to resource partitioning among syntopic populations of fish belonging to the same trophic group.

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