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Feeding Habits And Novel Prey Of Larval Fishes In The Northern San Francisco Estuary
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2021
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Source: Environmental DNA, 3, 1059– 1080
Details:
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Journal Title:Environmental DNA
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Personal Author:
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Sea Grant Program:
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Description:Food limitation can dampen the survival and growth of fish species during early de-
velopment. To investigate prey diversity important to the planktivorous larval long-fin smelt (Spirinchus thaleichthys) and Pacific herring (Clupea pallasii) from the San Francisco Estuary, we used DNA metabarcoding analysis of the cytochrome oxidase Igene on the guts of these fishes and on environmental zooplankton samples, in comparison with results from abundance analyses of zooplankton samples. Overall, both fish consumed the prey that were commonly available and relatively abundant: Diets were dominated by arthropods but also included soft-bodied and difficult to identify organisms. Prey taxa substantially overlapped between the two species (Schoener's index = 0.66), and alpha diversity analysis suggested high variability in the content of guts from different individuals. Abundant prey taxa in both fish species includedthe copepods Eurytemora carolleeae, Acanthocyclops americanus, and A. robustus Acanthocyclops spp. are difficult to distinguish morphologically. Differential abun-dance analysis suggested that both species consumed the most abundant zooplank-ton in lower proportions than their availability in the environment. A few uncommon prey observed in the diets may hint at feeding strategies employed by the larvae, such as herring DNA in the longfin smelt diets, suggesting feeding on eggs near substrates or schooling behavior. Herring consumed the small (<0.5 mm) copepod Limnoithona tetraspina much more frequently (30%) than did smelt (2%), possibly indicating differences in foraging behavior or sensory abilities. Among the unexpected prey found in the diets was the cnidarian Hydra oligactis, the polychaete Dasybranchus sp., an the copepod Mesocyclops pehpeiensis, a species not previously described in the San Francisco Estuary. Our findings illustrate the power of molecular methods in revealing feeding patterns and novel plankton diversity that can be undetectable with complementary morphological analysis methods.
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Source:Environmental DNA, 3, 1059– 1080
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Rights Information:CC BY-NC-ND
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Compliance:Submitted
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