DNA metabarcoding assays reveal a diverse prey assemblage for Mobula rays in the Bohol Sea, Philippines

Author:

Bessey Cindy1234ORCID,Jarman Simon N.24ORCID,Stat Michael5ORCID,Rohner Christoph A.6ORCID,Bunce Michael2ORCID,Koziol Adam2,Power Matthew2,Rambahiniarison Joshua M.7,Ponzo Alessandro7,Richardson Anthony J.89,Berry Oliver4

Affiliation:

1. Indian Oceans Marine Research Centre Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization, Oceans and Atmosphere Crawley Western Australia Australia

2. Trace and Environmental DNA Laboratory, School of Molecular and Life Sciences Curtin University Perth Western Australia Australia

3. School of Plant Biology and the Oceans Institute University of Western Australia Crawley Western Australia Australia

4. Environomics Future Science Platform, Indian Oceans Marine Research Centre Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization Crawley Western Australia Australia

5. Department of Biological Sciences Macquarie University North Ryde New South Wales Australia

6. Marine Megafauna Foundation Truckee California

7. Large Marine Vertebrates Research Institute Philippines Bohol Philippines

8. Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization, Oceans and Atmospheres Brisbane Queensland Australia

9. Centre for Applications in Natural Resource Mathematics, School of Mathematics and Physics University of Queensland St Lucia Queensland Australia

Abstract

AbstractDiet studies provide base understanding of trophic structure and are a valuable initial step for many fields of marine ecology, including conservation and fisheries biology. Considerable complexity in marine trophic structure can exist due to the presence of highly mobile species with long life spans. Mobula rays are highly mobile, large, planktivorous elasmobranchs that are frequently caught either directly or as bycatch in fisheries, which, combined with their conservative life history strategy, makes their populations susceptible to decline in intensely fished regions. Effective management of these iconic and vulnerable species requires an understanding of the diets that sustain them, which can be difficult to determine using conventional sampling methods. We use three DNA metabarcode assays to identify 44 distinct taxa from the stomachs (n = 101) of four sympatric Mobula ray species (Mobula birostris, Mobula tarapacana, Mobula japanica, and Mobula thurstoni) caught over 3 years (2013–2015) in a direct fishery off Bohol in the Philippines. The diversity and incidence of bony fishes observed in ray diets were unprecedented. Nevertheless, rays showed dietary overlap, with krill (Euphausia) dominating their diet. Our results provide a more detailed assessment of sympatric ray diets than was previously described and reveal the complexity that can exist in food webs at critical foraging habitats.

Funder

CSIRO Environomics Future Science Platform

ARC Linkage

Publisher

Wiley

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