SynopsisHerbivory by wide-ranging fishes is common over tropical reefs, but rare in temperate latitudes where the effects of herbivorous fishes are thought to be minimal. Along the west coast of North America, herbivory by fishes on nearshore reefs is largely restricted to a few members of the Kyphosidae, distributed south of Pt. Conception. This paper presents information on natural diets and results from feeding choice experiments for two abundant kyphosids from intertidal habitats in San Diego, California -Girella nigricans and Hermosilla azurea, and similar data for the lined shore crab, Pachygrapsus crassipes, which also forages over intertidal reefs. These results are compared with the availability of algae in intertidal habitats measured during summer and winter, on both disturbed and undisturbed habitats. The diets of juveniles of G. nigricans and H. azurea collected from nearshore habitats were dominated by animal prey (mainly amphipods), but adults of these fishes, and P. crassipes, consumed algae nearly exclusively, with 26,10, and 14 taxa of algae identified from G. nigricans, H. azurea, and P. crassipes, respectively. Algae with sheet-like morphologies (e.g. Ulva sp., Enteromorpha sp., members of the Delesseriaceae) were the principal algae in the diets of the fishes, and calcareous algae (e.g. Corallina sp., Lithothrix aspergillum) and sheet-like algae (Enteromorpha sp.) comprised the greatest identifiable portion of the shore crab's diet. Feeding choice experiments indicated that the fishes preferred filamentous algae (e.g. Centroceras clavulatum, Polysiphonia sp., Chondria californica) and sheet-like algae (e.g. Enteromorpha sp., Ulva sp., Cryptopleura crispa) over other algal morphologies, whereas the shore crab chose jointed calcareous algae (e.g. Lithothrix aspergillum, Corallina vancouveriensis, Jania sp.) most frequently. The diets and preferences for algae by the fishes were generally most similar to the assemblage of algae available in early successional (disturbed) habitats during summer when sheet-like and filamentous algae are abundant. The shore crab exhibited the opposite trend with a diet more similar to late successional (undisturbed) habitats.
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