Abstract

Mobulid rays have a conservative life history and are caught in direct fisheries and as by-catch. Their subsequent vulnerability to overexploitation has recently been recognized, but fisheries management can be ineffective if it ignores habitat and prey preferences and other trophic interactions of the target species. Here, we assessed the feeding ecology of four mobulids (Manta birostris, Mobula tarapacana, M. japanica, M. thurstoni) in the Bohol Sea, Philippines, using stomach contents analysis of fisheries specimens landed between November and May in 2013–2015. We show that the mobulids feed heavily on euphausiid krill while they are in the area for approximately six months of the year. We found almost no trophic separation among the mobulid species, with Euphausia diomedeae as the major prey item for all species, recorded in 81 of 89 total stomachs (91%). Mobula japanica and M. thurstoni almost exclusively had this krill in their stomach, while M. tarapacana had a squid and fish, and Ma. birostris had myctophid fishes and copepods in their stomachs in addition to E. diomedeae. This krill was larger than prey for other planktivorous elasmobranchs elsewhere and contributed a mean of 61 364 kcal per stomach (±105 032 kcal s.e., range = 0–631 167 kcal). Our results show that vertically migrating mesopelagic species can be an important food resource for large filter feeders living in tropical seas with oligotrophic surface waters. Given the conservative life history of mobulid rays, the identification of common foraging grounds that overlap with fishing activity could be used to inform future fishing effort.

Highlights

  • Mobulid rays are large pelagic planktivorous elasmobranchs comprising 11 species with a global distribution in tropical to warm-temperate waters [1]

  • Our results show that vertically migrating mesopelagic zooplankton species can be an important food resource for large filter feeders living in tropical seas with oligotrophic surface waters

  • Four mobulid species were regularly landed during our sample collection: Ma. birostris, M. tarapacana, M. japanica and M. thurstoni

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Summary

Introduction

Mobulid rays are large pelagic planktivorous elasmobranchs comprising 11 species with a global distribution in tropical to warm-temperate waters [1]. Basic biological knowledge is lacking for most mobulid species, making it difficult to assess and manage mobulid fisheries. Trophic knowledge can inform ecosystem-based fishery management [11] and can help reduce by-catch [2] through the identification of critical foraging areas, where the occurrence of target species and fishing activity overlap. If a fishery targets multiple species feeding in the same area, catch rates for the overall assemblage can stay high due to abundant feeding opportunities, but changes in abundance of individual species might vary [12]. The dynamics of multi-species fisheries, present a major problem for setting any total allowable catches of a particular species, and can hinder overall management across the range of species that are targeted, as it is difficult to predict catch composition [13]

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