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Changes in the feeding biology of the Nile perch, Lates niloticus (L.) (Pisces: Centropomidae), in Lake Victoria, East Africa since its introduction in 1960, and its impact on the native fish community of the Nyanza Gulf
Authors:N F Hughes
Institution:The Queen's College, Oxford University, Oxford, England
Abstract:Lates niloticus is not native to Lake Victoria but was introduced during or shortly before 1960. It remained relatively uncommon until 1975, when the number in the Nyanza Gulf began to increase impressively, the estimated catch rising over 100-fold between 1978 and 1982. Originally Lates was piscivorous, its diet reflecting the composition of the native fish community. The present investigation has revealed that its diet is now almost entirely comprised of Caridina nilotica , a small microphagous prawn, and juvenile Lates. Native fish species, except for the small pelagic Rastrineobola argenteus , are very rarely consumed. This change in diet is a result of the shattering impact Lates predation has had on the native fishes, which have been virtually wiped out. The original community, which was dominated by several hundred haplochromine species and the catfishes Clarias mossambicus and Bagrus docmac which preyed upon them, and included two endemic tilapiine cichlids and 38 species of non-cichlids, no longer exists. It has been replaced by a community dominated by Lates which now accounts for well over 80% of the fish biomass in the Nyanza Gulf and very nearly 100% in the study area. The only other species regularly encountered were Oreochromis niloticus , an introduced tilapiine, and Rastrineobola argenteus , a native zooplanktivore.
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