Dietary analysis of two sympatric marine turtle species in the eastern Mediterranean

Author:

Palmer Josie L.ORCID,Beton Damla,Çiçek Burak A.,Davey Sophie,Duncan Emily M.,Fuller Wayne J.,Godley Brendan J.,Haywood Julia C.,Hüseyinoğlu Mehmet F.,Omeyer Lucy C. M.,Schneider M. Jesse,Snape Robin T. E.,Broderick Annette C.

Abstract

AbstractDietary studies provide key insights into threats and changes within ecosystems and subsequent impacts on focal species. Diet is particularly challenging to study within marine environments and therefore is often poorly understood. Here, we examined the diet of stranded and bycaught loggerhead (Caretta caretta) and green turtles (Chelonia mydas) in North Cyprus (35.33° N, 33.47° E) between 2011 and 2019. A total of 129 taxa were recorded in the diet of loggerhead turtles (n = 45), which were predominantly carnivorous (on average 72.1% of dietary biomass), foraging on a large variety of invertebrates, macroalgae, seagrasses and bony fish in low frequencies. Despite this opportunistic foraging strategy, one species was particularly dominant, the sponge Chondrosia reniformis (21.5%). Consumption of this sponge decreased with increasing turtle size. A greater degree of herbivory was found in green turtles (n = 40) which predominantly consumed seagrasses and macroalgae (88.8%) with a total of 101 taxa recorded. The most dominant species was a Lessepsian invasive seagrass, Halophila stipulacea (31.1%). This is the highest percentage recorded for this species in green turtle diet in the Mediterranean thus far. With increasing turtle size, the percentage of seagrass consumed increased with a concomitant decrease in macroalgae. Seagrass was consumed year-round. Omnivory occurred in all green turtle size classes but reduced in larger turtles (> 75 cm CCL) suggesting a slow ontogenetic dietary shift. Macroplastic ingestion was more common in green (31.6% of individuals) than loggerhead turtles (5.7%). This study provides the most complete dietary list for marine turtles in the eastern Mediterranean.

Funder

Erwin Warth Foundation

Natural Environment Research Council

University of Exeter

Karşıyaka Turtle Watch

Angela Wadsworth

Maureen and Tony Hutchinson

Kuzey Kıbrıs Turkcell

MAVA Foundation

European Commission project INDICIT II

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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