Dietary metabarcoding of keystone sardine species reveals the importance of their ichthyoplankton prey in food webs of the Southern Brazilian Bight fisheries

Author:

de Queiroz Anna Karolina Oliveira12ORCID,Gasalla Maria A.3,Laux Marcele4,Oliveira Renato Renison Moreira56,dos Anjos Santa Rosa Fabricio1,Schrøder‐Nielsen Audun2,Postuma Felippe A.3,de Luna Sales João Bráullio1ORCID,de Boer Hugo J.2,Mauvisseau Quentin2ORCID,Ready Jonathan Stuart1

Affiliation:

1. Group for Integrated Biological Investigation, Center for Advanced Studies of Biodiversity Federal University of Pará Belém Brazil

2. Natural History Museum University of Oslo Oslo Norway

3. Fisheries Ecosystems Laboratory, Oceanographic Institute University of São Paulo São Paulo Brazil

4. Ecology Department Federal University of Minas Gerais Belo Horizonte Brazil

5. Instituto Tecnológico Vale Belém Brazil

6. Postgraduate Program in Bioinformatics Federal University of Minas Gerais Belo Horizonte Brazil

Abstract

AbstractClupeiform fishes are ecologically and economically important species contributing to industrial and artisanal fisheries worldwide. They represent key links in food webs, influencing the dynamic between trophic levels. The dietary interactions of these species are poorly studied in many regions, yet essential for fisheries management. To elucidate the role of these species in food webs of the Southern Brazilian Bight pelagic fisheries, we used metabarcoding analysis of fish stomach contents of Clupeiformes and possible predators. Onboard sampling from March to September 2016 allowed for processing of 87 stomach samples representing 31 species (including 12 samples representing three species of Clupeiformes). Links between trophic levels showed the predominance of Sardinella brasiliensis and Engraulis anchoita as important dietary items of a large range of fishes (28 species belonging to 18 families) and representing the majority of the total prey read abundance assigned to clupeiform fishes (~46% and ~32%, respectively). Opisthonema oglinum contributed to the diet of 16 species in 13 families and ~18% of total read abundance of clupeiform fishes as prey. The appearance of multiple clupeiform taxa in the diet of predators that are not commonly associated with pelagic prey indicates that ecosystem‐based fisheries management should not be separated between pelagic and demersal fisheries. The diet of Clupeiformes revealed an unexpectedly large diversity of fish species and a low proportion of invertebrates (<5% of clupeiform prey reads). This was likely due to a combination of both a limitation of the metabarcoding method (primer bias and low success of invertebrate taxonomic identification) as well as a contribution of early life stages (ichthyoplankton) to the diet of these fishes. The potential role of clupeiform fish populations as a constraint to the recruitment from the ichthyoplanktonic phase of other ecologically or commercially important fishes should be considered as an important direction for future studies.

Funder

Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico

Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior

Publisher

Wiley

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