The Food and Feeding Habits of the African Catfish, Clarias Gariepinus (Burchell, 1822) (Pisces: Clariidae) in Lake Hawassa and Shallo Swamp, Ethiopia

Authors

  • Yosef Tekle-Giorgis School of Animal and Range Sciences
  • Solomon Wagaw Department of Biology
  • Elias Dadebo Department of Biology

Keywords:

C. gariepinus, Feeding habit, Lake Hawassa, Omnivorous, Shallo swamp.

Abstract

Feeding habits of the African catfish Clarias gariepinus (Burchell, 1822) was studied based on 252 and 211 fish specimen collected from Lake Hawassa and Shallo swamp during dry and wet months of 2011. C. gariepinus in Lake Hawassa consumed insects (21% by volume), fish eggs (18.3%), fish (18.1%), gastropods (14.4%), macrophytes (13.6%), detritus (8.4%), zooplankton (2.6%), phytoplankton (1.7%), ostracods (0.7%), nematodes (0.5%) and fish scales (0.5%). In Shallo swamp, the fish mainly fed on macrophytes (31.7% by volume) and detritus (31.5%). Insects (12.2%), amphibians (9.5%), zooplankton (5.3%) and phytoplankton (4.9%) had also some contribution, while fish eggs, gastropods, ostracods, water mites and nematodes had insignificant contribution to the diet. Seasonal variation in the diet of C. gariepinus was slight in both habitats. Ontogenetic dietary shift was observed in Lake Hawassa. Smaller size C. gariepinus (<45 cm TL) in Lake Hawassa fed mainly on insects, fish and fish eggs and their importance decreased as the fish size increased while large sized C. gariepinus (>45 cm TL) tended to filter-feed more on zooplankton. All size groups of C. gariepinus in Shallo swamp mainly fed on macrophytes and detritus. Generally C. gariepinus in both habitats fed on food of plant and animal origin albeit in varying proportions, and the fish can be considered as omnivorous in its feeding habit

Published

2023-04-10