Abstract

BackgroundStomach contents of 131 specimens of five elasmobranch species (Mustelus lunulatus, Dasyatis longa, Rhinobatos leucorhynchus, Raja velezi and Zapteryx xyster) caught in the central fishing zone in the Pacific Ocean of Colombia were counted and weighed to describe feeding habits and dietary overlaps.ResultsTwenty-one prey items belonging to four major groups (stomatopods, decapods, mollusks and fish) were identified. Decapod crustaceans were the most abundant prey found in stomachs. The mantis shrimp Squilla panamensis was the main prey item in the diet of M. lunulatus; tiger shrimp Trachypenaeus sp. was the main prey item in the diet of Rhinobatos leucorhynchus and Raja velezi, and Penaeidae shrimp were the main prey items in the diet of Z. xyster. Furthermore, fish were important in the diet of Raja velezi, Z. xyster and D. longa. The greatest diet breadth corresponded to Z. xyster whereas M. lunulatus was the most specialized predator. Finally, four significant diet overlaps between the five species were found, attributable mainly to Squillidae, Penaeidae and Fish.ConclusionShrimps (Penaeidae and stomatopods) and benthic fishes were the most important food types in the diet of the elasmobranch species studied. Diet breadth and overlap were relatively low. Determination of food resource partitioning among the batoid species studied was not possible. However, we identified partitions in other niche axes (time of feeding activity and habitat utilization). It is possible to assume that diffuse competition could be exceeding the biunivocal competition among the studied species. Therefore, this assemblage would have a strong tendency to trophic guild formation.

Highlights

  • Stomach contents of 131 specimens of five elasmobranch species (Mustelus lunulatus, Dasyatis longa, Rhinobatos leucorhynchus, Raja velezi and Zapteryx xyster) caught in the central fishing zone in the Pacific Ocean of Colombia were counted and weighed to describe feeding habits and dietary overlaps

  • Significant differences in the bathymetric distribution of the species were found (KW-H (4,162) = 105.16, p

  • Dasyatis longa and Rhinobatos leucorhynchus were associated with the shallowest depths (Figure 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Stomach contents of 131 specimens of five elasmobranch species (Mustelus lunulatus, Dasyatis longa, Rhinobatos leucorhynchus, Raja velezi and Zapteryx xyster) caught in the central fishing zone in the Pacific Ocean of Colombia were counted and weighed to describe feeding habits and dietary overlaps. An understanding of competitive and predatory processes is necessary to gain insight into the role of predators in influencing niche, community and food web structure, and ecosystem dynamics [2]. In this sense, the theory about resource partitioning is frequently attributed to competitive or cooperative interactions. Several studies have evaluated the influence of resource partitioning in teleost fishes to explain reduction in competition potential [5,6,7] These authors reported a positive relationship between habitat partitioning and the magnitude of diet overlap or competitive interactions, when the interacting species had the same diet preferences. Despite the ecological importance of elasmobranch fishes for the marine ecosystem, resource partitioning and competitive exclusions in this taxonomic group are poorly understood

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