DNA metabarcoding reveals rangewide variation in aquatic diet of a riparian avian insectivore, the Prothonotary Warbler

Author:

Rogers Samantha L12ORCID,Verrelli Brian C3,Bukaveckas Paul A2,Ames Elizabeth M4,Youtz Joseph5,Boves Than J5,Johnson Erik I6,Tonra Christopher M4,Bulluck Lesley P2

Affiliation:

1. Integrative Life Sciences Doctoral Program, Virginia Commonwealth University , Richmond, Virginia , USA

2. Center for Environmental Studies, Virginia Commonwealth University , Richmond, Virginia , USA

3. Center for Biological Data Science, Virginia Commonwealth University , Richmond, Virginia , USA

4. School of Environment and Natural Resources, The Ohio State University , Columbus, Ohio , USA

5. Department of Biological Sciences, Arkansas State University , Jonesboro, Arkansas , USA

6. Audubon Delta, National Audubon Society , Baton Rouge, Louisiana , USA

Abstract

Abstract Riparian avian insectivores not only depend on terrestrial insect prey but also benefit from the inclusion of aquatic prey during critical life-history periods. Diets identified herein show that Prothonotary Warbler (Protonotaria citrea) nestlings were provisioned with aquatic prey throughout the breeding season across their range, but with variation in prey frequency of occurrence and taxonomy. Anthropogenic activity and climate change may impact the trophic link especially between aquatic and riparian habitats by altering the presence, abundance, and timing of prey availability. Thus, we used DNA metabarcoding of fecal samples to quantify the frequency of occurrence of nestling diet items at 9 sites across their breeding range that differed in expected aquatic prey consumption. We analyzed spatial and temporal differences in the occurrence and multivariate diet assemblages of each prey source. Lepidoptera was the predominant terrestrial prey occurring in diets across space and time, whereas emergent aquatic insects and freshwater mollusks in aquatic diet exhibited greater variation. The frequency of emergent aquatic prey occurrence in nestling diets ranged from 61% to 100% across sites and was greater for early-season nestlings. The seasonal decrease in aquatic prey consumption indicates a potential temporal shift in the nutritional landscape from aquatic to terrestrial prey sources and a possible nutritional phenological mismatch for early nestlings as climate change advances the timing of insect emergence. Our findings also suggest that Prothonotary Warblers respond to environmental variability by consuming alternative prey and argue for future research investigating the extent to which shifting diets have nutritional consequences for riparian nestlings.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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