4.6 Article

Relevance of feeding ecology in the management of invasive species: Prey variability in a novel invasive crab

Journal

ESTUARINE COASTAL AND SHELF SCIENCE
Volume 274, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecss.2022.107949

Keywords

Invasive crab; Mesopredator; Management; Diet; NIS; Daily ingestion rate

Funding

  1. Canary Government
  2. FEDER funds by Agencia Canaria de Investigacion Innovacion y Sociedad de la Informacion (ACIISI) [ProId2017010083, CEI2019-06]
  3. Spanish MINECO's Juan de la Cierva-Formacion programme [FJC2019-040218-I/AEI/10.13039/501100011033]
  4. European Recovery Plan (Next Generation EU)

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This study examined the feeding ecology of the invasive crab Cronius ruber and found that it consumes a diverse diet, with a preference for Brachyuran and Polychaete species. The diet composition and ingestion rates varied with ontogenic groups and seasons. The study also observed native predators preying on the invasive crab. These results provide important information for understanding the potential impacts of this invasive species.
The diet composition of non-indigenous species (NIS) provides essential information to recognise potential impacts on ecosystems. This study examined the feeding ecology of the novel invasive crab Cronius ruber from demographic and seasonal perspectives. It identified 52 prey items in crab gut contents (n = 278), and more than 18% of the studied specimens had empty guts. The high-frequency prey belonged to Brachyuran (51.54%) and Polychaete (34.36%), followed by Echinidea (22.47%), Gastropoda (21.15%) and Perciformes (20.70%). Additionally, the night sampling showed prey that were not observed in the examined stomach contents. The daily ingestion rates based on polychaeta indicated more prey consumption by juveniles (< 55 mm carapace width (CW)) and adults crabs (55 mm-75 mm CW) than the old adults (> 75 mm CW). This falls in line with the number of prey items retained in individuals' guts, which changed seasonally and in ontogenic groups. Moreover, the visual night observations showed that native predators foraged on the invasive crab. These predators were groupers, octopus and elasmobranchs. The seasonal and ontogenic differences observed in diet through the stomach content analysis and daily ingestion rates suggest that C. ruber eats a generalist diet. The dissimilarity analysis suggested possible resource partitioning in ontogenic groups. Our results could represent the baseline for future studies into the possible impacts of this invasive NIS, as well as some arguments to include C. ruber on the list of invasive alien species of European Union concern.

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