Geographic and ontogenetic variation in the diet and daily ration of the bonnethead shark, <Emphasis Type="Italic">Sphyrna tiburo</Emphasis>, from the eastern Gulf of Mexico |
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Authors: | Dana M Bethea Loraine Hale John K Carlson Enric Cortés Charles A Manire James Gelsleichter |
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Institution: | (1) Southeast Fisheries Science Center, Panama City Laboratory, NOAA Fisheries, 3500 Delwood Beach Road, Panama City Beach, FL 32408, USA;(2) Mote Marine Laboratory, 1600 Ken Thompson Parkway, Sarasota, FL 34236, USA |
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Abstract: | To examine variation in diet and daily ration of the bonnethead shark, Sphyrna tiburo (Linnaeus 1758), animals were collected from three areas in the eastern Gulf of Mexico: northwest Florida (∼29°40′N, 85°13′W),
Tampa Bay near Anclote Key (∼28°10′N, 82°42.5′W), and Florida Bay (∼24°50′N, 80°48′W) from March through September, 1998–2000.
In each area, diet was assessed by life stage (young-of-the year, juveniles, and adults) and quantified using five indices:
percent by number (%N), percent by weight (%W), frequency of occurrence (%O), index of relative importance expressed on a
percent basis (%IRI), and %IRI based on diet category (%IRIDC). Diet could not be assessed for young-of-the-year in Tampa Bay or Florida Bay owing to low sample size. Diet analysis showed
an ontogenetic shift in northwest Florida. Young-of-the-year stomachs from northwest Florida (n = 68, 1 empty) contained a mix of seagrass and crustaceans while juvenile stomachs (n = 82, 0 empty) contained a mix of crabs and seagrass and adult stomachs (n = 39, 1 empty) contained almost exclusively crabs. Crabs made up the majority of both juvenile and adult diet in Tampa Bay
(n = 79, 2 empty, and n = 88, 1 empty, respectively). Juvenile stomachs from Florida Bay (n = 72, 0 empty) contained seagrass and a mix of crustaceans while adult stomachs contained more shrimp and cephalopods (n = 82, 3 empty). Diets in northwest Florida and Tampa Bay were similar. The diet in Florida Bay was different from those in
the other two areas, consisting of fewer crabs and more cephalopods and lobsters. Plant material was found in large quantities
in all stomachs examined from all locations (>15 %IRIDC in 6 of the 7 life stage-area combinations, >30 %IRIDC in 4 of the 7 combinations, and 62 %IRIDC in young-of-the-year diet in northwest Florida). Using species- and area-specific inputs, a bioenergetic model was constructed
to estimate daily ration. Models were constructed under two scenarios: assuming plant material was and was not part of the
diet. Overall, daily ration was significantly different by sex, life stage, and region. The bioenergetic model predicted increasing
daily ration with decreasing latitude and decreasing daily ration with ontogeny regardless of the inclusion or exclusion of
plant material. These results provide evidence that bonnetheads continuously exposed to warmer temperatures have elevated
metabolism and require additional energy consumption to maintain growth and reproduction.
Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users. |
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