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The mysterious feeding ecology of leptocephali: a unique strategy of consuming marine snow materials
by
Tsukamoto Katsumi
, Miller, Michael J
in
Amorphous materials
/ Carbohydrates
/ DNA sequences
/ DNA sequencing
/ Egg yolk
/ Energy storage
/ Faecal pellets
/ Fatty acids
/ Feeding
/ Food chains
/ Food webs
/ Foods
/ Glycosaminoglycans
/ Intestine
/ Intestines
/ Larvae
/ Marine fishes
/ Marine snow
/ Microorganisms
/ Plankton
/ Protists
/ Scaling
/ Snow
/ Teeth
/ Yolk
/ Zooplankton
2021
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The mysterious feeding ecology of leptocephali: a unique strategy of consuming marine snow materials
by
Tsukamoto Katsumi
, Miller, Michael J
in
Amorphous materials
/ Carbohydrates
/ DNA sequences
/ DNA sequencing
/ Egg yolk
/ Energy storage
/ Faecal pellets
/ Fatty acids
/ Feeding
/ Food chains
/ Food webs
/ Foods
/ Glycosaminoglycans
/ Intestine
/ Intestines
/ Larvae
/ Marine fishes
/ Marine snow
/ Microorganisms
/ Plankton
/ Protists
/ Scaling
/ Snow
/ Teeth
/ Yolk
/ Zooplankton
2021
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Do you wish to request the book?
The mysterious feeding ecology of leptocephali: a unique strategy of consuming marine snow materials
by
Tsukamoto Katsumi
, Miller, Michael J
in
Amorphous materials
/ Carbohydrates
/ DNA sequences
/ DNA sequencing
/ Egg yolk
/ Energy storage
/ Faecal pellets
/ Fatty acids
/ Feeding
/ Food chains
/ Food webs
/ Foods
/ Glycosaminoglycans
/ Intestine
/ Intestines
/ Larvae
/ Marine fishes
/ Marine snow
/ Microorganisms
/ Plankton
/ Protists
/ Scaling
/ Snow
/ Teeth
/ Yolk
/ Zooplankton
2021
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The mysterious feeding ecology of leptocephali: a unique strategy of consuming marine snow materials
Journal Article
The mysterious feeding ecology of leptocephali: a unique strategy of consuming marine snow materials
2021
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Overview
Leptocephalus larvae have transparent bodies with tubular intestines that usually lack identifiable food items when they are collected, so mystery has surrounded efforts to determine what they feed on. Artificially spawned and reared first-feeding larvae were found to be highly selective in what they would eat, but they would consume rotifers and eventually ate specially formulated diets that contained shark egg yolk. Gut content studies on wild-caught leptocephali in the Atlantic and Pacific observed marine snow-associated materials such as discarded appendicularian houses, zooplankton fecal pellets, protists, and amorphous materials, and DNA sequencing indicated that the gut contents contain materials originating from a wide range of microorganisms and food web zooplankton species that were likely consumed in marine snow. Isotopic studies found a low trophic position of leptocephali and inter-taxa and geographic signature differences. Behavioral studies with leptocephali and the characteristics and size-scaling of the teeth are also consistent with feeding on marine snow-related particles. The feeding strategy of leptocephali appears to be based on consuming types of marine snow that contain nutritious and easily assimilated carbohydrates, fatty acids, and other materials that facilitate rapid conversion to glycosaminoglycans and tissues for energy storage and growth.
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