FEEDING HABITS OF THE NILE PERCH, LATES NILOTICUS (L.) (PISCES: CENTROPOMIDAE) IN LAKE CHAMO, ETHIOPIA

Authors

  • Elias Dadebo
  • Seyoum Mengistou
  • Zinabu Gebre-Mariam

Keywords:

Cannibalism, diet composition, Lates niloticus, ontogenetic diet shift, predation

Abstract

Diet composition and ontogenetic diet shift of the Nile perch, Lates niloticus (L.) were
studied from 411 fish samples (1.9 cm to 192 cm TL) collected from February 1995 to May 1996. Most
fish samples (n=221, 53.8%) had empty stomachs. Except the two smallest fry (1.9 cm and 2.3 cm TL) fish
samples (n=188) that contained food in their stomachs consumed only fish. The cyprinid fish Labeo horie
(Heckel) was the most important prey organism of juvenile and adult L. niloticus and occurred in 49.4%
of the stomachs examined, constituted 38.02% of the total number and 70.44% of the total volume of the
prey. Oreochromis niloticus (L.) occurred in 22.35% of the stomachs accounted for 19% of the total
number and 24.82% of the total volume of food consumed. Hydrocynus forskahlii (Cuvier) occurred in
14.12% of the stomachs, constituted 9.92% of the total number and 2.72% of the total volume of prey
consumed. Cannibalism was observed in 19.4% of juvenile fish (n=62, 48.5–73.2 cm TL) and smaller L.
niloticus constituted 26.1% of the total volume of food consumed within this size range. H. forskahlii, O.
niloticus and L. niloticus were the main prey of fish <90 cm TL while L. horie was important prey of fish
>90 cm TL. Based on index of relative importance (IRI) L. horie was the most important prey (5359)
followed by O. niloticus (979), L. niloticus (392) and H. forskahlii (178.5). Fry and fingerlings of L. niloticus
(n=20) ranging from 1.9 to 7.1 cm TL were caught using a beach seine of 6 mm mesh size. The two
smallest fish (1.9 cm and 2.5 cm TL) had eaten insect larvae while the remaining 18 fish had all eaten 1–3
fry of O. niloticus that ranged from 0.8 to 1.9 cm TL.

Published

2023-02-23