Author Identifier (ORCID)

Alexandre C. Siqueira: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7970-4024

Abstract

Coral reefs depend on the assimilation of off-reef nutrients, particularly from zooplankton, to fuel on-reef productivity. Planktivorous reef fishes thus play a critical role in sustaining a key ecosystem function as the major consumers of plankton. The importance of gelatinous zooplankton to the nutritional ecology of larger-bodied planktivorous fishes is becoming increasingly apparent. Yet, the extent to which feeding on gelatinous plankton within these taxa is a product of ontogeny has not yet been addressed. It has been hypothesised that Caesio cuning, a key planktivorous species that contributes substantially to reef fish biomass on Australia’s Great Barrier Reef, undergoes an ontogenetic diet shift from predominantly non-gelatinous prey as juveniles to a diet composed mainly of gelatinous zooplankton as adults. We examine high-taxonomic resolution DNA metabarcoding of gut contents, with morphometric analyses, to investigate whether changing body size and habitat are linked with a purported dietary transition in C. cuning. We reveal clear evidence of a shift towards increased feeding on gelatinous plankton with increasing body size in C. cuning. Across the sampled habitats, small- and large-sized individuals occupied distinct dietary spaces. The increase in size and ontogenetic dietary shift in C. cuning was also correlated with a transition towards morphological traits associated with feeding and movement in the water column. These results emphasise the importance of gelatinous zooplankton in shaping the distribution, feeding ecology, and productivity of C. cuning on coral reefs and underscore the close connection between large body size and exploitation of gelatinous plankton by reef fishes.

Keywords

coral reefs, DNA metabarcoding, ecosystem function, gelatinous zooplankton, morphological adaptations, ontogenetic diet shift, planktivory, trophic ecology

Document Type

Journal Article

Date of Publication

1-1-2026

Publication Title

Coral Reefs

Publisher

Springer

School

Centre for Marine Ecosystems Research / School of Science

RAS ID

99276

Funding Information

Funding was provided by Australian Government Research Training Program Scholarship, Australian Research Council, FL190100062, DE250101047, Chris Joscelyne Postdoctoral Fellowship, Australian Museum’s Lizard Island Research Station, Ian Potter Foundation.

Grant Number

ARC Numbers : FL190100062, DE250101047

Grant Link

https://dataportal.arc.gov.au/NCGP/Web/Grant/Grants#/20/1//FL190100062/ https://dataportal.arc.gov.au/NCGP/Web/Grant/Grants#/20/1//DE250101047/

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Comments

Gahan, J., Bellwood, D. R., Morais, R. A., Nankervis, L., Ng, I., Siqueira, A. C., Villacorta-Rath, C., & Tebbett, S. B. (2026). Increasing body size unlocks gelatinous planktivory in a key coral reef fish species. Coral Reefs. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00338-026-02880-5

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Link to publisher version (DOI)

10.1007/s00338-026-02880-5