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Sibling Cannibalism of Young Red Drum, Sciaenops ocellatus, in Relation to Size Disparity and Metabolic Rates
Authors:Emily Yi-Ying Chang  I Chiu Liao
Institution:(1) Department of Applied Chemistry, National Defense University, Chung Cheng Institute of Technology, P.O. Box 90047-19, Dashi Jen, Taoyuan, Taiwan 335, ROC;(2) Taiwan Fisheries Research Institute, 199 Hou-Ih Road, Keelung, Taiwan 202, ROC
Abstract:Cannibalism is a leading cause of young mortality in the red drum, Sciaenops ocellatus, culture, and size disparity is its primary causative factor. Cannibalism did not occur in young fish, graded by a difference of 0.5thinspcm from 2.0 to 4.5thinspcm in total length. There was a shift in the size distribution from unimodal (normal) when there was no cannibalism, to bimodal or trimodal when cannibalism occurred. The results suggested that the wider was the size disparity, the greater was the sibling cannibalism. Size disparity increased with growth and in turn with sibling cannibalism, which became insignificant when the young grew to a size of about 6thinspcm. We present threshold levels of size disparity among siblings to prevent mutual cannibalism. We hypothesize that through sibling cannibalism a hierarchy may evolve in a red drum cohort, at which a stable population will form.
Keywords:frequency distribution  size variation  population size  catabolism  anabolism
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