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Nutritional quality of macrophytyes eaten and not eaten by two temperatezone herbivorous fishes: a multivariate comparison

Location
AMERICAN SAMOA
Author(s)
Neighbors, M A.
Horn, M H.
Publisher
Department of Biologist Science, California State University at Fullerton
Ocean Studies Institute
Publication Year:
1990
Publication Place
Long Beach, California|Fullerton, California
Physical Description:
6 pp; figures; tables
Call Number
VF 41414
Language
English
Record ID:
18910
Legacy PEIN ID:
58824
General Notes
It is often unclear why plant-eating fish and invertebrates in temperature waters consume only a fraction of the wide variety of macrophytes available to them as potential foods. Perhaps differences in nutritional quality among the available macrophytes are major reasons for the other temperate marine herbivores.
Location
AMERICAN SAMOA
Author(s)
Neighbors, M A.
Horn, M H.
Publisher
Department of Biologist Science, California State University at Fullerton
Ocean Studies Institute
Publication Year:
1990
Publication Place
Long Beach, California|Fullerton, California
Physical Description:
6 pp; figures; tables
Call Number
VF 41414
Language
English
Record ID:
18910
Legacy PEIN ID:
58824
General Notes
It is often unclear why plant-eating fish and invertebrates in temperature waters consume only a fraction of the wide variety of macrophytes available to them as potential foods. Perhaps differences in nutritional quality among the available macrophytes are major reasons for the other temperate marine herbivores.
Record Created: 05-Sep-2001
Record Modified: 18-Dec-2020