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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Knowledge of the dietary choices and trophic niches of organisms is the key to understanding
their roles in ecosystems. In seabird diet studies, prey identification is a
difficult challenge, often yielding results with technique-specific biases. Additionally,
sampling efforts are often not extensive enough to reveal intrapopulational variation.
Immature animals, which may constitute up to 50% of a population, may occupy a significantly
different trophic niche to more experienced birds, but this remains largely
unexplored. We investigated the diet of Cory’s shearwater (Calonectris diomedea) from
Selvagem Grande, an island located off the northwest African coast, collecting a total of
698 regurgitate samples over three consecutive breeding seasons. The diet was assessed
using two complementary approaches for prey identification: conventional morphological
analysis (using fish vertebrae, otoliths and cephalopod beaks) and DNA barcoding
of the 16S rRNA mitochondrial gene, in cases where a positive identification could not
be retrieved. Species assignments employed BLAST and distance-based methods, as
well as direct optimization of the tree length based on unaligned sequences in POY.
This method resulted in robust tree estimates and species assignments, showing its
potential for DNA barcoding of stomach contents using hypervariable markers such as
the 16S. The molecular approach increased taxonomic resolution and revealed an additional
17 taxa. Diet differed significantly according to breeding status, sex, breeding
phase (prelaying and chick rearing) and year. Such direct evidence of trophic segregation
within the same population has rarely been shown in seabirds and highlights the
importance of including such variables in ecosystem-based management approaches.
Description
Keywords
Calonectris diomedea Nonbreeders Prebreeding Prey identification Selvagens Sexual segregation
Citation
Molecular Ecology, 23, 3719-3733
Publisher
Wiley-Blackwell