Centre for Palaeobiology Research, School of Geography, Geology and the Environment, University of Leicester, Leicester, LE1 7RH, UK.
Department of Environmental Science, University of Derby, Derby, DE22 1GB, UK.
Sci Rep. 2021 Jan 28;11(1):2444. doi: 10.1038/s41598-021-81258-9.
As abundant and widespread predators, elasmobranchs play influential roles in food-web dynamics of marine communities. Clearly, these trophic interactions have significant implications for fisheries management and marine conservation, yet elasmobranch diet is relatively understudied; for the majority of species little or no quantitative dietary data exist. This reflects the difficulties of direct observation of feeding and stomach contents analysis in wild elasmobranchs. Here, by quantifying the 3D surface textures that develop on tooth surfaces as a consequence of feeding, we show that tooth microwear varies with diet in elasmobranchs, providing a new tool for dietary analysis. The technique can be applied to small samples and individuals with no gut contents, and thus offers a way to reduce the impact on wild elasmobranch populations of analysing their dietary ecology, especially relevant in conservation of endangered species. Furthermore, because microwear accumulates over longer periods of time, analysis of texture overcomes the 'snapshot bias' of stomach contents analysis. Microwear texture analysis has the potential to be a powerful tool, complementing existing techniques such as stable isotope analysis, for dietary analysis in living and extinct elasmobranchs.
作为丰富且广泛存在的掠食者,鲨鱼和鳐类在海洋群落的食物网动态中发挥着重要作用。显然,这些营养相互作用对渔业管理和海洋保护具有重大意义,但鲨鱼和鳐类的饮食相对研究不足;对于大多数物种,几乎没有或根本没有定量的饮食数据。这反映了在野生鲨鱼和鳐类中直接观察摄食和胃内容物分析的困难。在这里,我们通过量化因摄食而在牙齿表面形成的 3D 表面纹理,表明鲨鱼和鳐类的牙齿微观磨损随饮食而变化,为饮食分析提供了一种新工具。该技术可应用于没有肠内容物的小样本和个体,从而减少了分析其饮食生态的对野生鲨鱼和鳐类种群的影响,这在濒危物种的保护中尤为重要。此外,由于微观磨损会在较长时间内积累,因此纹理分析克服了胃内容物分析的“快照偏差”。微观磨损纹理分析有可能成为一种强大的工具,补充现有的技术,如稳定同位素分析,用于对活体和已灭绝的鲨鱼和鳐类的饮食分析。