2014
DOI: 10.1111/mec.12785
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An holistic ecological analysis of the diet of Cory's shearwaters using prey morphological characters and DNA barcoding

Abstract: Knowledge of the dietary choices and trophic niches of organisms is the key to understanding their roles in ecosystems. In seabird diet studies, prey identification is a difficult challenge, often yielding results with technique-specific biases. Additionally, sampling efforts are often not extensive enough to reveal intrapopulational variation. Immature animals, which may constitute up to 50% of a population, may occupy a significantly different trophic niche to more experienced birds, but this remains largely… Show more

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Cited by 59 publications
(65 citation statements)
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“…juvenile, sub-adult or adult, according to the darkness of the lower beaks: initially from the tip of the rostrum, when juvenile, up to the wing, only darkened in adults), following the guidelines of Cherel (2009), Xavier et al (2011) and using beak collections at the Institute of Marine Research, University of Coimbra, Portugal and at the Centre d'Etudes Biologiques de Chizé,9 France. Fish species were identified from vertebrae and one individual from otoliths using reference collections (Alonso et al, 2014). As one squid species was clearly dominant, we used molecular methods to verify the identification obtained with the lower beaks (Appendix 1).…”
Section: Dietmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…juvenile, sub-adult or adult, according to the darkness of the lower beaks: initially from the tip of the rostrum, when juvenile, up to the wing, only darkened in adults), following the guidelines of Cherel (2009), Xavier et al (2011) and using beak collections at the Institute of Marine Research, University of Coimbra, Portugal and at the Centre d'Etudes Biologiques de Chizé,9 France. Fish species were identified from vertebrae and one individual from otoliths using reference collections (Alonso et al, 2014). As one squid species was clearly dominant, we used molecular methods to verify the identification obtained with the lower beaks (Appendix 1).…”
Section: Dietmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…DNA-based approaches have also yielded breakthrough dietary analyses in complex freshwater systems (e.g., Corse et al 2010;Carreon-Martinez et al 2011;Bartley et al 2015). Most of the studies to date attest to the effectiveness of DNA-based analysis, especially when combined with morphological analysis (e.g., Casper et al 2007;Braley et al 2010;Alonso et al 2014), and they offer new insights in trophic ecology.…”
Section: Clarifying the Links Of Aquatic Food Websmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A few studies to date have sampled specific aquatic predator taxa more deeply, and demonstrated the occurrence of trophic segregation between different life stages (e.g., age, breeding status, and sex; Alonso et al 2014;Jo et al 2014). Thus, they suggest that different population segments choose different diets.…”
Section: Resolving Substructuring Within Aquatic Species and Populationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…These problems apply in particular to items originating as fisheries offal, as viscera float and are therefore easier to ingest than fish heads with otoliths, particularly those from large species (Thompson and Riddy, 1995). More recent studies have used DNA analysis to identify parts that were not taxonomically diagnostic (Alonso et al, 2014). However, studies using stomach samples are usually restricted to the chick-rearing period, thus focusing on chick rather than adult diet across the annual cycle and usually requires handling of birds.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%