Section of Integrative Biology, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, USA.
PLoS One. 2013;8(1):e53041. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0053041. Epub 2013 Jan 15.
Understanding dietary trends for endangered species may be essential to assessing the effects of ecological disturbances such as habitat modification, species introductions or global climate change. Documenting temporal variation in prey selection may also be crucial for understanding population dynamics. However, the rarity, secretive behaviours and obscure microhabitats of some endangered species can make direct foraging observations difficult or impossible. Furthermore, the lethality or invasiveness of some traditional methods of dietary analysis (e.g. gut contents analysis, gastric lavage) makes them inappropriate for such species. Stable isotope analysis facilitates non-lethal, indirect analysis of animal diet that has unrealized potential in the conservation of endangered organisms, particularly amphibians.
METHODOLOGY/FINDINGS: I determined proportional contributions of aquatic macroinvertebrate prey to the diet of an endangered aquatic salamander Eurycea sosorum over a two-year period using stable isotope analysis of (13/12)C and (15/14)N and the Bayesian stable isotope mixing model SIAR. I calculated Strauss' dietary electivity indices by comparing these proportions with changing relative abundance of potential prey species through time. Stable isotope analyses revealed that a previously unknown prey item (soft-bodied planarian flatworms in the genus Dugesia) made up the majority of E. sosorum diet. Results also demonstrate that E. sosorum is an opportunistic forager capable of diet switching to include a greater proportion of alternative prey when Dugesia populations decline. There is also evidence of intra-population dietary variation.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Effective application of stable isotope analysis can help circumvent two key limitations commonly experienced by researchers of endangered species: the inability to directly observe these species in nature and the invasiveness or lethality of traditional methods of dietary analysis. This study illustrates the feasibility of stable isotope analysis in identifying preferred prey species that can be used to guide conservation management of both wild and captive food sources for endangered species.
了解濒危物种的饮食趋势对于评估生态干扰(如栖息地改变、物种引入或全球气候变化)的影响可能至关重要。记录猎物选择的时间变化对于了解种群动态也可能至关重要。然而,一些濒危物种的稀有性、隐秘行为和模糊的微生境使得直接觅食观察变得困难或不可能。此外,一些传统的饮食分析方法(如肠道内容物分析、胃灌洗)的致命性或侵入性使得它们不适合这些物种。稳定同位素分析为非致命性、间接分析动物饮食提供了便利,这在濒危生物保护方面具有尚未实现的潜力,特别是对两栖动物。
方法/发现:我使用(13/12)C 和(15/14)N 的稳定同位素分析以及贝叶斯稳定同位素混合模型 SIAR,确定了在两年期间内濒危水生蝾螈 Eurycea sosorum 对水生大型无脊椎动物猎物的比例贡献。我通过比较这些比例与潜在猎物物种随时间的相对丰度变化,计算了斯特劳斯的饮食选择性指数。稳定同位素分析表明,以前未知的猎物(Dugesia 属的软躯体扁形虫)构成了 E. sosorum 饮食的主要部分。结果还表明,E. sosorum 是一种机会主义觅食者,当 Dugesia 种群减少时,它能够通过饮食转换来包括更多的替代猎物。也有证据表明存在种群内饮食差异。
结论/意义:稳定同位素分析的有效应用可以帮助克服研究濒危物种的研究人员通常面临的两个关键限制:无法在自然环境中直接观察这些物种和传统饮食分析方法的侵入性或致命性。本研究说明了稳定同位素分析在确定优先猎物物种方面的可行性,这些物种可用于指导濒危物种野生和圈养食物来源的保护管理。