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Secondary predation constrains DNA-based diet reconstruction in two threatened shark species
by
Mark de Bruyn
, Matt K. Broadhurst
, Joseph D. DiBattista
, Matteo Barbato
in
631/158/2464
/ 631/1647/2163
/ Animals
/ Biodiversity
/ Biological oceanography
/ Biomass
/ Bycatch
/ Carcharhinus limbatus
/ Carcharhinus melanopterus
/ Deoxyribonucleic acid
/ Diet
/ DNA
/ DNA Barcoding, Taxonomic
/ DNA Barcoding, Taxonomic - methods
/ DNA Barcoding, Taxonomic - standards
/ Endangered Species
/ Food Chain
/ GREAT HAMMERHEAD SHARK
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ JUVENILE BLACKTIP SHARKS
/ Life history
/ Medicine
/ multidisciplinary
/ Multidisciplinary Sciences
/ Predation
/ Predators
/ Predatory Behavior
/ Prey
/ Q
/ R
/ Science
/ Science & Technology
/ Science & Technology - Other Topics
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Sharks
/ Sharks - physiology
/ Skates, Fish
/ Skates, Fish - genetics
/ Species extinction
/ Sphyrna mokarran
/ Taxa
/ Threatened species
2021
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Secondary predation constrains DNA-based diet reconstruction in two threatened shark species
by
Mark de Bruyn
, Matt K. Broadhurst
, Joseph D. DiBattista
, Matteo Barbato
in
631/158/2464
/ 631/1647/2163
/ Animals
/ Biodiversity
/ Biological oceanography
/ Biomass
/ Bycatch
/ Carcharhinus limbatus
/ Carcharhinus melanopterus
/ Deoxyribonucleic acid
/ Diet
/ DNA
/ DNA Barcoding, Taxonomic
/ DNA Barcoding, Taxonomic - methods
/ DNA Barcoding, Taxonomic - standards
/ Endangered Species
/ Food Chain
/ GREAT HAMMERHEAD SHARK
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ JUVENILE BLACKTIP SHARKS
/ Life history
/ Medicine
/ multidisciplinary
/ Multidisciplinary Sciences
/ Predation
/ Predators
/ Predatory Behavior
/ Prey
/ Q
/ R
/ Science
/ Science & Technology
/ Science & Technology - Other Topics
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Sharks
/ Sharks - physiology
/ Skates, Fish
/ Skates, Fish - genetics
/ Species extinction
/ Sphyrna mokarran
/ Taxa
/ Threatened species
2021
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Secondary predation constrains DNA-based diet reconstruction in two threatened shark species
by
Mark de Bruyn
, Matt K. Broadhurst
, Joseph D. DiBattista
, Matteo Barbato
in
631/158/2464
/ 631/1647/2163
/ Animals
/ Biodiversity
/ Biological oceanography
/ Biomass
/ Bycatch
/ Carcharhinus limbatus
/ Carcharhinus melanopterus
/ Deoxyribonucleic acid
/ Diet
/ DNA
/ DNA Barcoding, Taxonomic
/ DNA Barcoding, Taxonomic - methods
/ DNA Barcoding, Taxonomic - standards
/ Endangered Species
/ Food Chain
/ GREAT HAMMERHEAD SHARK
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ JUVENILE BLACKTIP SHARKS
/ Life history
/ Medicine
/ multidisciplinary
/ Multidisciplinary Sciences
/ Predation
/ Predators
/ Predatory Behavior
/ Prey
/ Q
/ R
/ Science
/ Science & Technology
/ Science & Technology - Other Topics
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Sharks
/ Sharks - physiology
/ Skates, Fish
/ Skates, Fish - genetics
/ Species extinction
/ Sphyrna mokarran
/ Taxa
/ Threatened species
2021
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Secondary predation constrains DNA-based diet reconstruction in two threatened shark species
Journal Article
Secondary predation constrains DNA-based diet reconstruction in two threatened shark species
2021
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Overview
Increasing fishing effort, including bycatch and discard practices, are impacting marine biodiversity, particularly among slow-to-reproduce taxa such as elasmobranchs, and specifically sharks. While some fisheries involving sharks are sustainably managed, collateral mortalities continue, contributing towards > 35% of species being threatened with extinction. To effectively manage shark stocks, life-history information, including resource use and feeding ecologies is pivotal, especially among those species with wide-ranging distributions. Two cosmopolitan sharks bycaught off eastern Australia are the common blacktip shark (
Carcharhinus limbatus
; globally classified as Near Threatened) and great hammerhead (
Sphyrna mokarran
; Critically Endangered). We opportunistically sampled the digestive tracts of these two species (and also any whole prey; termed the ‘Russian-doll’ approach), caught in bather-protection gillnets off northern New South Wales, to investigate the capacity for DNA metabarcoding to simultaneously determine predator and prey regional feeding ecologies. While sample sizes were small,
S. mokkaran
fed predominantly on stingrays and skates (Myliobatiformes and Rajiformes), but also teleosts, while
C. limbatus
mostly consumed teleosts. Metabarcoding assays showed extensive intermixing of taxa from the digestive tracts of predators and their whole prey, likely via the predator’s stomach chyme, negating the opportunity to distinguish between primary and secondary predation. This Russian-doll effect requires further investigation in DNA metabarcoding studies focussing on dietary preferences and implies that any outcomes will need to be interpreted concomitant with traditional visual approaches.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC,Nature Publishing Group UK,Nature Publishing Group,Nature Portfolio
Subject
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