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Resumen del producto
Sampson, L., F., Galván-Magaña, R., De Silva-Dávila, S., Aguíñiga García & J.B., O'Sullivan
(2010).
Diet and trophic position of the devil rays Mobula thurstoni and Mobula japanica as inferred from stable isotope analysis.
Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom.
90(5): 969-976.
DOI: 10.1017/S0025315410000548.
Diet and trophic position of the devil rays Mobula thurstoni and Mobula japanica as inferred from stable isotope analysis
Laura Sampson, Felipe Galván-Magaña, Roxana De Silva-Dávila, Sergio Aguíñiga García y John B. O'Sullivan
This study confirms the diet and determines the trophic position of the bentfin devil ray (Mobula thurstoni) and spinetail devil ray (Mobula japanica) in the south-west Gulf of California. There has been an active fishery in the area for these filter-feeding elasmobranchs, which are highly susceptible to exploitation due to low fecundity and long lifespan. However, information on their basic biology is scarce. ?13C and ?15N values of devil rays and zooplankton (sorted according to trophic level: herbivores, carnivores and omnivores) were determined over a period of 11 months, to allow for isotopic temporal variations in isotopic signals at the base of the food web. On the basis of fractionation factors we determined that bentfin and spinetail devil rays fed mainly on Nyctiphanes simplex, the most abundant euphausiid in neritic waters of the Gulf of California. The trophic positions obtained for the devil rays correspond to second level consumers.
Palabras clave: Guadalupe fur seal; diet; Nyctiphanes simplex; devil rays; temporal variability
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