Abstract

Fundulus heteroclitus (L.) from a North Carolina Spartina marsh teed largely on small crustaceans (amphipods, tanaids and copepods) and polychaetes. Fish longer than 30 mm standard length also ingested considerable amounts of living plant material. Smaller individuals were distinctly carnivorous. Recognizable particles of Spartina detritus occurred in less than 15% of the guts examined. The relationship of weight to length changed significantly during the year. Although females were larger than males of the same age. males were heavier than females of the same length, except for a brief period at the peak of the spawning season in the early spring. An average second season fish may lay up to 512 eggs from March through August, but first season fish did not reach reproductive size by the end of the spawning season. Growth of first season fish in mid-summer averaged 5% of their total weight per day. These significant seasonal changes in ecological properties of killifish populations are important in any estimates of growth, reproduction, and production.

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