Document of bibliographic reference 363081

BibliographicReference record

Type
Bibliographic resource
Type of document
Journal article
BibLvlCode
AS
Title
DNA metabarcoding confirms primary targets and breadth of diet for coral reef butterflyfishes
Abstract
Understanding species-specific resource requirements is paramount in managing and protecting biodiversity in a world where environmental quality is in decline. Dietary data can inform predator–prey relationships and how changes in prey availability impact different species. However, for many coral reef fishes, prey and predatory events can be difficult to observe and identify, both in situ and within examined stomach samples. Here we applied DNA metabarcoding of stomach content samples for 11 Red Sea butterflyfish species to identify the diversity of dietary components that these primarily benthic feeding fish consume across coral reefs. Detections based on 18S and COI sequences from partially digested stomach contents significantly increased the resolution and diversity of the known diet for this group of fish, which included cryptic prey that are difficult to visually document due to soft parts or morphological ambiguity. In addition to scleractinian corals and other Cnidaria, the obligate corallivore species fed on a wide range of benthic organisms, whereas facultative species displayed a broader diet with crustaceans, tunicates, and worms contributing to samples. While a number of individuals contained DNA that could not be confidently identified using this method, the proportion of unidentifiable sequences was relatively low across butterflyfish species. The COI marker identified the importance of soft corals in the diet for two hard coral specialists; Chaetodon melannotus and Chaetodon semilarvatus, with soft coral detected in over half of the individuals and contributing significantly to the number of DNA sequence reads within their gut. Notably, five prey items identified to the species level were detected that are currently not documented in the Red Sea. Our analysis revealed that the diet of different species of butterflyfish significantly overlaps, with all species deriving most of their diet from the phylum Cnidaria (hard and soft coral, anemones) and symbiotic Symbiodiniaceae algae. Furthermore, accumulation curves suggest that all study species may feed on an even greater fraction of the benthos, likely driven by the availability and diversity of each individual/pair’s territory. This approach increases the known dietary resolution and diversity of these key reef fishes and further enhances our understanding of the relationship between butterflyfish and benthic organisms.
WebOfScience code
https://www.webofscience.com/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:000854659300001
Bibliographic citation
Coker, D.J.; Dibattista, J.D.; Stat, M.; Arrigoni, R.; Reimer, J.; Terraneo, T.I.; Villalobos, R.; Nowicki, J.P.; Bunce, M.; Berumen, M.L. (2023). DNA metabarcoding confirms primary targets and breadth of diet for coral reef butterflyfishes. Coral Reefs 42(1): 1-15. https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00338-022-02302-2
Is peer reviewed
true

Authors

author
Name
Darren Coker
author
Name
Joseph Dibattista
author
Name
Michael Stat
author
Name
Roberto Arrigoni
author
Name
James Reimer
author
Name
Tullia Terraneo
author
Name
Rodrigo Villalobos
author
Name
Jessica Nowicki
author
Name
Michael Bunce
author
Name
Michael Berumen

Links

referenced creativework
type
DOI
accessURL
https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00338-022-02302-2

Document metadata

date created
2023-04-03
date modified
2023-04-05