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Ecology and Status of Piscivores in Guri, an Oligotrophic Tropical Reservoir
Author(s) -
Williams John D.,
Winemiller Kirk O.,
Taphorn Donald C.,
Balbas Luis
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
north american journal of fisheries management
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.587
H-Index - 72
eISSN - 1548-8675
pISSN - 0275-5947
DOI - 10.1577/1548-8675(1998)018<0274:easopi>2.0.co;2
Subject(s) - cichlid , piscivore , biology , lepomis , ecology , pomacentridae , fishery , zoology , predation , coral reef , predator , coral reef fish , fish <actinopterygii>
Guri Reservoir in Venezuela supports sport fisheries for two cichlid species (pavón venado or speckled pavon Cichla temensis and pavón mariposa C. orinocensis ) and payara Hydrolycus scomberoides. The lake receives acidic, hyperoligotrophic “black waters” from the Caroní River and experiences water level fluctuations associated with seasonal precipitation and hydroelectric operations. During the early 1980s, piscivore populations expanded in the new reservoir, but the quality of sportfishing declined during the 1990s. During 1993–94, we studied the ecology of the two Cichla species, H. scomberoides , and a fourth piscivore, Plagioscion squamosissimus (curvinata or silver croaker) and compared our data with those from similar surveys performed 7–9 years earlier (0–2 years after attainment of the reservoir's current crest height). Seine and gill‐net samples from the lake's northern region produced 50 fish species from 18 families. Seine samples were dominated by a small characid, Hemigrammus micropterus , whereas gill‐net samples were dominated by a large detritivorous characiform, Prochilodus rubrotaeniatus. Gill‐net catch rates were low in all three surveys. All four piscivores from our recent survey had better body condition than in a 1985–1986 study, an indication of possible growth compensation. Diet breadths of all piscivores were low, and diet overlap was low for H. scomberoides with the two Cichla species and for P. squamosissimus with C. orinocensis. Hydrolycus scomberoides and C. temensis consumed significantly larger prey than P. squamosissimus , and differences in the relative proportions of specific characid and cichlid fishes consumed by the two Cichla species indicate that they forage at different depths within the littoral zone. The combined effects of hyperoligotrophic waters entering the reservoir, reduced inputs of dissolved nutrients from submerged terrestrial vegetation, low retention time of the reservoir, and harvest probably influence the low abundance of the two Cichla species in Guri Reservoir.

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