Assessing the Diet of the Elusive North American River Otter (Lontra canadensis) in Florida Using Faecal DNA Metabarcoding

IF 2.5 3区 环境科学与生态学 Q3 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
Judith Bakker, Maurits P. M. van Zinnicq Bergmann, Megan Stolen, Jeremy J. Kiszka
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Abstract

North American river otters (Lontra canadensis) are semiaquatic mammals distributed throughout the North American continent. They are generalist carnivores with a high potential to affect community structure and dynamics. However, habitat degradation and ecosystem changes have the potential to impact their trophic interactions. Therefore, investigating their diet is critical to understand how anthropogenic disturbances can affect their ecological roles, particularly in the urbanised ecosystems in Florida, where such diet information is currently unavailable. Due to their elusive nature, direct observation of feeding events is a major challenge. Here, we have applied DNA metabarcoding of faecal matter (fDNA), opportunistically collected from river otters killed by road traffic in eastern Florida. Two mitochondrial markers were used to identify prey species' DNA—one for fish and one for vertebrates. A total of 23 unique exact sequence variants (ESVs) were identified, the majority belonging not only to teleosts but also to amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals. The prey species identified are known dietary resources for river otters and the recovered dietary profiles provided independently by the fish and vertebrate assays were similar. Among the identified teleost prey, three fish species are considered invasive. Here, we show that when sufficient reference sequences are available, fDNA metabarcoding provides high prey species resolution. The collection and metabarcoding of faecal samples is particularly advantageous for scaling diet studies, both geographically and longitudinally, highlighting the potential of fDNA metabarcoding for the investigation of the diet of predators. This can provide foundational information on the organisation of ecological networks, which is vital for implementing successful ecosystem-based conservation management.

利用粪便 DNA 元条码评估佛罗里达州难以捉摸的北美河獭(Lontra canadensis)的食性
北美河獭(Lontra canadensis)是一种半水生哺乳动物,分布于整个北美大陆。它们是通食性食肉动物,具有影响群落结构和动态的巨大潜力。然而,栖息地退化和生态系统变化有可能影响它们的营养相互作用。因此,调查它们的食性对于了解人为干扰如何影响它们的生态作用至关重要,尤其是在佛罗里达州的城市化生态系统中,目前尚无此类食性信息。由于其难以捉摸的特性,直接观察其摄食活动是一项重大挑战。在这里,我们对从佛罗里达州东部因道路交通而死亡的河獭身上偶然收集到的粪便(fDNA)进行了 DNA 代谢编码。我们使用了两种线粒体标记来识别猎物物种的 DNA--一种是鱼类,一种是脊椎动物。共鉴定出 23 个独特的精确序列变体 (ESV),其中大多数不仅属于长尾鳍鱼类,也属于两栖类、爬行类、鸟类和哺乳类。鉴定出的猎物物种是河獭已知的膳食资源,鱼类和脊椎动物检测独立提供的恢复的膳食概况相似。在确定的远足类猎物中,有三种鱼类被认为是入侵性的。我们在此表明,如果有足够的参考序列,fDNA 代谢编码可提供较高的猎物物种分辨率。收集粪便样本并对其进行代谢标定,对于扩大食性研究的地域和纵向范围尤为有利,这凸显了 fDNA 代谢标定在调查食肉动物食性方面的潜力。这可以为生态网络的组织提供基础信息,这对于成功实施基于生态系统的保护管理至关重要。
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来源期刊
Aquatic Conservation-Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems
Aquatic Conservation-Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems 环境科学-海洋与淡水生物学
CiteScore
5.50
自引率
4.20%
发文量
143
审稿时长
18-36 weeks
期刊介绍: Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems is an international journal dedicated to publishing original papers that relate specifically to freshwater, brackish or marine habitats and encouraging work that spans these ecosystems. This journal provides a forum in which all aspects of the conservation of aquatic biological resources can be presented and discussed, enabling greater cooperation and efficiency in solving problems in aquatic resource conservation.
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