AI Article Synopsis

  • * Over 1.2 million DNA sequences identified six classes from 80 different taxa, showing that sea lions are opportunistic eaters primarily consuming demersal species, with commercially important species like southern calamari and western rock lobster detected in less than 25% of samples.
  • * The research highlights significant diet differences across sampling locations, enhancing understanding of sea lion prey and demonstrating the effectiveness of noninvasive scat analysis for studying regional biodiversity.

Article Abstract

The analysis of apex predator diet has the ability to deliver valuable insights into ecosystem health, and the potential impacts a predator might have on commercially relevant species. The Australian sea lion () is an endemic apex predator and one of the world's most endangered pinnipeds. Given that prey availability is vital to the survival of top predators, this study set out to understand what dietary information DNA metabarcoding could yield from 36 sea lion scats collected across 1,500 km of its distribution in southwest Western Australia. A combination of PCR assays were designed to target a variety of potential sea lion prey, including mammals, fish, crustaceans, cephalopods, and birds. Over 1.2 million metabarcodes identified six classes from three phyla, together representing over 80 taxa. The results confirm that the Australian sea lion is a wide-ranging opportunistic predator that consumes an array of mainly demersal fauna. Further, the important commercial species (southern calamari squid) and (western rock lobster) were detected, but were present in <25% of samples. Some of the taxa identified, such as fish, sharks and rays, clarify previous knowledge of sea lion prey, and some, such as eel taxa and two gastropod species, represent new dietary insights. Even with modest sample sizes, a spatial analysis of taxa and operational taxonomic units found within the scat shows significant differences in diet between many of the sample locations and identifies the primary taxa that are driving this variance. This study provides new insights into the diet of this endangered predator and confirms the efficacy of DNA metabarcoding of scat as a noninvasive tool to more broadly define regional biodiversity.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5528208PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.3123DOI Listing

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