Evaluating fish diet analysis methods by individual-based modelling
Authored by Ida Ahlbeck, Sture Hansson, Olle Hjerne
Date Published: 2012
DOI: 10.1139/f2012-051
Sponsors:
Baltic Sea 2020
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
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Abstract
Knowledge of diet compositions is important in ecological research.
There are many methods available and numerous aspects of diet
composition. Here we used modelling to evaluate how well different diet
analysis methods describe the ``true{''} diet of fish, expressed in mass
percentages. The methods studied were both basic methods (frequency of
occurrence, dominance, numeric, mass, points) and composite indices
(Index of Relative Importance, Comparative Feeding Index). Analyses were
based on both averaged stomach content of individual fish and on pooled
content from several fish. Prey preference, prey size, and evacuation
rate influenced the performance of the diet analysis methods. The basic
methods performed better than composite indices. Mass and points methods
produced diet compositions most similar to the true diet and were also
most robust, indicating that these methods should be used to describe
energetic-nutritional sources of fish.
Tags
Food
Gastric evacuation