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Invasive European green crab (Carcinus maenas) predation in a Washington State estuary revealed with DNA metabarcoding
by
Kelly, Ryan P.
, Litle, Kate
, Fisher, Mary C.
, McDonald, P. Sean
, Grason, Emily W.
, Stote, Alex
in
Abundance
/ Analysis
/ Animals
/ Aquaculture
/ Aquaculture industry
/ Aquaculture products
/ Arthropods
/ Bivalvia - genetics
/ Brachyura - genetics
/ Brachyura - physiology
/ Carcinus maenas
/ Crabs
/ Crustaceans
/ Decapoda
/ Deoxyribonucleic acid
/ Diet
/ DNA
/ DNA barcoding
/ DNA Barcoding, Taxonomic - methods
/ Ecosystem
/ Ecosystems
/ Estuaries
/ Estuarine ecology
/ Estuarine ecosystems
/ Food Chain
/ Galvanized steel
/ Gastrointestinal Contents - chemistry
/ Genetic testing
/ Habitats
/ Indigenous species
/ Introduced Species
/ Invasive species
/ Leptocottus armatus
/ Mollusks
/ Nonnative species
/ Population
/ Population decline
/ Predation
/ Predation (Biology)
/ Predatory Behavior
/ Prey
/ Relative abundance
/ Shellfish
/ Stomach
/ Taxa
/ Washington
/ Wildlife conservation
2024
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Invasive European green crab (Carcinus maenas) predation in a Washington State estuary revealed with DNA metabarcoding
by
Kelly, Ryan P.
, Litle, Kate
, Fisher, Mary C.
, McDonald, P. Sean
, Grason, Emily W.
, Stote, Alex
in
Abundance
/ Analysis
/ Animals
/ Aquaculture
/ Aquaculture industry
/ Aquaculture products
/ Arthropods
/ Bivalvia - genetics
/ Brachyura - genetics
/ Brachyura - physiology
/ Carcinus maenas
/ Crabs
/ Crustaceans
/ Decapoda
/ Deoxyribonucleic acid
/ Diet
/ DNA
/ DNA barcoding
/ DNA Barcoding, Taxonomic - methods
/ Ecosystem
/ Ecosystems
/ Estuaries
/ Estuarine ecology
/ Estuarine ecosystems
/ Food Chain
/ Galvanized steel
/ Gastrointestinal Contents - chemistry
/ Genetic testing
/ Habitats
/ Indigenous species
/ Introduced Species
/ Invasive species
/ Leptocottus armatus
/ Mollusks
/ Nonnative species
/ Population
/ Population decline
/ Predation
/ Predation (Biology)
/ Predatory Behavior
/ Prey
/ Relative abundance
/ Shellfish
/ Stomach
/ Taxa
/ Washington
/ Wildlife conservation
2024
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Invasive European green crab (Carcinus maenas) predation in a Washington State estuary revealed with DNA metabarcoding
by
Kelly, Ryan P.
, Litle, Kate
, Fisher, Mary C.
, McDonald, P. Sean
, Grason, Emily W.
, Stote, Alex
in
Abundance
/ Analysis
/ Animals
/ Aquaculture
/ Aquaculture industry
/ Aquaculture products
/ Arthropods
/ Bivalvia - genetics
/ Brachyura - genetics
/ Brachyura - physiology
/ Carcinus maenas
/ Crabs
/ Crustaceans
/ Decapoda
/ Deoxyribonucleic acid
/ Diet
/ DNA
/ DNA barcoding
/ DNA Barcoding, Taxonomic - methods
/ Ecosystem
/ Ecosystems
/ Estuaries
/ Estuarine ecology
/ Estuarine ecosystems
/ Food Chain
/ Galvanized steel
/ Gastrointestinal Contents - chemistry
/ Genetic testing
/ Habitats
/ Indigenous species
/ Introduced Species
/ Invasive species
/ Leptocottus armatus
/ Mollusks
/ Nonnative species
/ Population
/ Population decline
/ Predation
/ Predation (Biology)
/ Predatory Behavior
/ Prey
/ Relative abundance
/ Shellfish
/ Stomach
/ Taxa
/ Washington
/ Wildlife conservation
2024
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Invasive European green crab (Carcinus maenas) predation in a Washington State estuary revealed with DNA metabarcoding
Journal Article
Invasive European green crab (Carcinus maenas) predation in a Washington State estuary revealed with DNA metabarcoding
2024
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Overview
Predation by invasive species can threaten local ecosystems and economies. The European green crab ( Carcinus maenas ), one of the most widespread marine invasive species, is an effective predator associated with clam and crab population declines outside of its native range. In the U.S. Pacific Northwest, green crab has recently increased in abundance and expanded its distribution, generating concern for estuarine ecosystems and associated aquaculture production. However, regionally-specific information on the trophic impacts of invasive green crab is very limited. We compared the stomach contents of green crabs collected on clam aquaculture beds versus intertidal sloughs in Willapa Bay, Washington, to provide the first in-depth description of European green crab diet at a particularly crucial time for regional management. We first identified putative prey items using DNA metabarcoding of stomach content samples. We compared diet composition across sites using prey presence/absence and an index of species-specific relative abundance. For eight prey species, we also calibrated metabarcoding data to quantitatively compare DNA abundance between prey taxa, and to describe an ‘average’ green crab diet at an intertidal slough versus a clam aquaculture bed. From the stomach contents of 61 green crabs, we identified 54 unique taxa belonging to nine phyla. The stomach contents of crabs collected from clam aquaculture beds were significantly different from the stomach contents of crabs collected at intertidal sloughs. Across all sites, arthropods were the most frequently detected prey, with the native hairy shore crab ( Hemigrapsus oregonensis ) the single most common prey item. Of the eight species calibrated with a quantitative model, two ecologically-important native species–the sand shrimp ( Crangon franciscorum) and the Pacific staghorn sculpin ( Leptocottus armatus )–had the highest average DNA abundance when detected in a stomach content sample. In addition to providing timely information on green crab diet, our research demonstrates the novel application of a recently developed model for more quantitative DNA metabarcoding. This represents another step in the ongoing evolution of DNA-based diet analysis towards producing the quantitative data necessary for modeling invasive species impacts.
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