Name: | Description: | Size: | Format: | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1.2 MB | Adobe PDF |
Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Despite their importance for fisheries, livelihoods and biodiversity conservation, shelf
ecosystems in West Africa are poorly known. Caspian Tern (Hydroprogne caspia) and Royal
Tern (Thalasseus maximus) are two of the most numerous and widespread nesting seabirds
in the region, and an understanding of the diet of these opportunistic predators may throw
light on important elements of the local food webs. This study describes and compares the
prey consumed by these two species in Guinea and Guinea-Bissau collected from 2013 to
2015. Our results show that both tern species feed mostly on pelagic fish from which
Clupeidae (mostly Sardinella maderensis) dominated the diet at all locations and seasons.
Pristigasteridae and Polynemidae were the next most frequent prey in the diet of these two
tern species. Our findings strengthen the recent suggestion of a wasp-waist ecosystem for
our study area, with sardinella as the key prey for several predators, including seabirds and
pelagic fishes, and potentially influencing their distribution and abundance. Moreover, our
results show a higher diversity in the diet of the Caspian Tern, with this species preying on a
greater range of benthopelagic fishes (e.g. Gerreidae; Mugilidae) which fits with observations
of inshore foraging that seems rarer in Royal Terns. We further show that prey identification
based only on otoliths from pellets, as opposed to the use of all hard structures (e.g. otoliths, vertebrae, scales), seriously underestimates the occurrence of species with fragile and small otoliths, including clupeids and other small pelagics.
Description
Keywords
Hydroprogne caspia Thalasseus maximus albididorsalis Bijagós Archipelago Sardinella maderensis
Citation
Marine Biology Research, 14(9-10), 961-972 Doi: 10.1080/17451000.2019.1572193
Publisher
Taylor & Francis