4.4 Article

Population variance in prey, diets and their macronutrient composition in an endangered marine predator, the Franciscana dolphin

Journal

JOURNAL OF SEA RESEARCH
Volume 129, Issue -, Pages 70-79

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.seares.2017.05.008

Keywords

Macronutrient composition; Nutritional geometry; Diet; Pontoporia blainvillei; Cetaceans

Funding

  1. Universidad Nacional de Mar del Plata [UNMDP-15E567]
  2. Agencia Nacional de Promocion Cientifica y Tecnologica de Argentina [PICT 2015-2455]
  3. Cetacean Society International (CSI)
  4. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientificas y Tecnicas, CONICET
  5. Faculty of Veterinary Science, The University of Sydney
  6. Australian Research Council [LP140100235]
  7. Australian Research Council [LP140100235] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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Disentangling the intricacies governing dietary breadth in wild predators is important for understanding their role in structuring ecological communities and provides critical information for the management and conservation of ecologically threatened species. Here we combined dietary analysis, nutritional composition analysis of prey, literature data and nutritional geometry (right-angled mixture triangle models -RMT-) to examine the diet of the most threatened small cetacean in the western South Atlantic Ocean, the Franciscana dolphin (Pontoporia blainvillei). We applied a recently developed extension of niche theory based on the RMT to help understand the dietary strategies of this species. Our results showed that across their range the Franciscanas consumed prey with variable protein-to-lipid energy ratios (LMM, p < 0.001). In an intensive study of one area, FMA IV, we found that dolphins sub-populations, which recent genetic evidence suggest should be differentiated into three management units, have diets with different protein energy and water mass compositions, but similar protein-to-lipid energy ratios. Furthermore, dolphins from the three areas mixed different combinations of prey in their diets to achieve the observed macronutrient ratios. These results suggest that the different habitats that each sub-population occupies (estuarine, north marine area and south marine) might be associated with different prey composition niches, but similar realized nutritional niches. Future priorities are to better comprehend possible geographical and long-term seasonal effects on prey consumption and dietary breadth of the different Franciscana populations to identify potential impacts (environmental and human-related), enhance the current management strategies to protect this endangered marine predator.

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