Abstract

Feeding habit and diet composition of two colonizing mullids, Upeneus asymmetricus and U. moluccensis, and two indigenous goatfish Mullus barbatus and M. surmuletus (Mullidae), in the eastern Mediterranean were investigated. The most important taxonomic group in the diet of all four species was the Decapoda which were identified to the specific level, enabling precise assessment of trophic partitioning. Leptochela pugnax, a pasiphaeid of Red Sea origin, was by far the most important prey of all mullids studied, which resulted in considerable trophic overlap between all of the species. Trophic separation does not play an important role in resource partitioning of the eastern Mediterranean mullids. Consequently, coexistence between colonizing and indigenous mullids is presumably achieved by spatial segregation.

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