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Title: | Trophic position of dolphins tracks recent changes in the pelagic ecosystem of the Macaronesian region (NE Atlantic) | Authors: | Bode, A Saavedra, C Álvarez-González, M Arregui Gil, Marina Arbelo Hernández, Manuel Antonio Fernández Rodríguez, Antonio Jesús Freitas, L Silva, MA Prieto, R Azevedo, JMN Giménez, J Pierce, GJ Santos, MB |
UNESCO Clasification: | 240119 Zoología marina 240106 Ecología animal |
Keywords: | Cetaceans Marine mammals Canary Islands Madeira Azores, et al |
Issue Date: | 2022 | Project: | Fomento de la actividad ecoturística de whale watching como modelo de desarrollo económico sostenible mediante la protección y conservación de las poblaciones de cetáceos y su puesta en valor como patrimonio natural de la Macaronesia Red Macaronésica de transferencia de conocimientos y tecnologías interregional y multidisciplinar para proteger, vigilar y monitorizar los cetáceos y el medio marino, y analizar y explotar de forma sostenible la actividad turística asociada |
Journal: | Marine Ecology - Progress Series | Abstract: | Dolphins play a key role in marine food webs as predators of mid-trophic-level con- sumers. Because of their mobility and relatively long life span, they can be used as indicators of large-scale changes in the ecosystem. In this study, we calculated the trophic position (TP) of 5 dolphin species from the Canary, Madeira and Azores Islands using bulk and compound-specific stable isotope ratios from muscle tissue to assess trophic adaptations to recent changes in the availability of feeding resources. Dolphin TP values were then compared with those of 7 other species of cetaceans from this region. Analysis of stable nitrogen isotopes in amino acids of the common dolphin indicated non-significant effects of changes in the basal resources of the food web and thus supported the use of bulk samples for TP estimations. Dolphins occupied an inter- mediate TP (mean: 3.91 to 4.20) between fin (3.25) and sperm whales (4.95). Species-specific TP were equivalent among islands. However, TP increased for the common dolphin and decreased for the bottlenose dolphin (the latter also becoming more oceanic) between 2000 and 2018 in the Canary Islands. These results suggest different impacts of recent changes in the oceanography and in the pelagic food web of the Macaronesian region on the trophic ecology of dolphin species. | URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10553/119359 | ISSN: | 0171-8630 | DOI: | 10.3354/meps14176 | Source: | Marine Ecology Progress Series [ISSN 0171-8630], v. 699, p. 167-180 |
Appears in Collections: | Artículos |
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