AI Article Synopsis

  • Marine communities are experiencing rapid changes due to human impacts, with significant shifts observed in the Baltic Sea's pelagic food web over the past century.
  • The study focuses on the diet overlap among herring, sprat, and stickleback in the Baltic Sea, using advanced methodologies like DNA metabarcoding and microscopy to analyze their feeding habits.
  • Findings reveal that while there is niche differentiation between the clupeids and stickleback, rotifers play a crucial role as an underutilized food resource, suggesting they support the growing stickleback population by filling an open feeding niche.

Article Abstract

Marine communities undergo rapid changes related to human-induced ecosystem pressures. The Baltic Sea pelagic food web has experienced several regime shifts during the past century, resulting in a system where competition between the dominant planktivorous mesopredatory clupeid fish species herring (Clupea harengus) and sprat (Sprattus sprattus) and the rapidly increasing stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) population is assumed to be high. Here, we investigate diet overlap between these three planktivorous fishes in the Baltic Sea, utilizing DNA metabarcoding on the 18S rRNA gene and the COI gene, targeted qPCR, and microscopy. Our results show niche differentiation between clupeids and stickleback, and highlight that rotifers play an important role in this pattern, as a resource that is not being used by the clupeids nor by other zooplankton in spring. We further show that all the diet assessment methods used in this study are consistent, but also that DNA metabarcoding describes the plankton-fish link at the highest taxonomic resolution. This study suggests that rotifers and other understudied soft-bodied prey may have an important function in the pelagic food web and that the growing population of pelagic stickleback may be supported by the open feeding niche offered by the rotifers.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9242992PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-15116-7DOI Listing

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