Lambert Charlotte, Broderick Annette C, Beton Damla, Cañadas Ana, Dars Cécile, Di Matteo Andrew, Gilbert Lola, Giménez Joan, Keramidas Ioannis, Navarro Joan, Palmer Josie L, Snape Robin T E, Sparks Laura, Spitz Jérôme, Tsikliras Athanassios C, Virgili Auriane, Grémillet David
Littoral ENvironnement et Société UMR 7266, CNRS-La Rochelle Université, La Rochelle 17000, France.
Centre d'Ecologie Fonctionnelle et Evolutive, Univ Montpellier, CNRS, Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes, Institut de Recherche pour le Développement, Montpellier 34293, France.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2025 Feb 11;122(6):e2412845122. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2412845122. Epub 2025 Feb 3.
Ocean giants shape the structure and functioning of marine food webs via trophic top-down controls, landscapes of fear, vertical and horizontal redistribution of nutrients, energy, and matter. Yet, they face threats from overfishing, pollution, habitat degradation, and climate change, and one-third of marine megafauna species are at risk of extinction, ultimately endangering the resilience of entire ecosystems. In such a context, knowing when and where megafauna find resources to balance their substantial energy requirements is critical for their management. Through an energyscape approach integrating abundance censuses, diet, and energy requirements, we investigated the prey consumption patterns of Mediterranean marine megafauna during the summer. We thereby shed light on a diverse guild of species composed of fishes, mammals, reptiles, and birds and estimated that 4.1 million individuals consume 1.6 million tons of prey each summer, pelagic cephalopods being the primary food resource and cetaceans and tunas being key players in the community. Spatial patterns in prey consumption reflected the diverse distribution and needs of the megafauna species and underlined the critical importance of the western Mediterranean for the megafauna community. Conservation strategies should prioritize spatial and biological diversity to safeguard megafauna and ecosystem functions across the Mediterranean basin.
海洋巨兽通过营养级的自上而下控制、恐惧景观、营养物质、能量和物质的垂直与水平再分配,塑造了海洋食物网的结构和功能。然而,它们面临着过度捕捞、污染、栖息地退化和气候变化等威胁,三分之一的海洋大型动物物种面临灭绝风险,最终危及整个生态系统的恢复力。在这种背景下,了解大型动物何时何地获取资源以平衡其巨大的能量需求,对其管理至关重要。通过整合丰度普查、饮食和能量需求的能量景观方法,我们调查了地中海海洋大型动物在夏季的猎物消费模式。我们由此揭示了一个由鱼类、哺乳动物、爬行动物和鸟类组成的多样化物种群体,并估计每年夏天有410万个个体消耗160万吨猎物,浮游头足类动物是主要食物资源,鲸类和金枪鱼是群落中的关键角色。猎物消费的空间模式反映了大型动物物种的多样分布和需求,并突出了地中海西部对大型动物群落的至关重要性。保护策略应优先考虑空间和生物多样性,以保护整个地中海盆地的大型动物和生态系统功能。