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    Diet, trophic interactions and possible ecological role of commercial sharks and batoids in northern Peruvian waters

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    Date
    2021-03
    Author
    González Pestana, Adriana
    Mangel, Jeffrey C.
    Alfaro Córdova, Eliana
    Acuña Perales, Nicolás
    Córdova Zavaleta, Francisco
    Segura Cobeña, Eduardo
    Benites, Diego
    Espinoza, Maximiliano
    Coasaca Céspedes, Javier
    Jiménez, Astrid
    Pingo, Sergio
    Moscoso, Víctor
    Alfaro Shigueto, Joanna
    Espinoza, Pepe
    Publisher
    Wiley
    Description
    Artículo de publicación ISI
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    Abstract
    The Peruvian sea represents one of the most productive ocean ecosystems and possesses one of the largest elasmobranch fisheries in the Pacific Ocean. Ecosystem-based management of these fisheries will require information on the trophic ecology of elasmobranchs. This study aimed to understand the diet, trophic interactions and the role of nine commercial elasmobranch species in northern Peru through the analysis of stomach contents. A total of 865 non-empty stomachs were analysed. Off northern Peru, elasmobranchs function as upper-trophic-level species consuming 78 prey items, predominantly teleosts and cephalopods. Two distinctive trophic assemblages were identified: (a) sharks (smooth hammerhead shark Sphyrna zygaena, thresher shark Alopias spp. and blue shark Prionace glauca) that feed mainly on cephalopods in the pelagic ecosystem; and (b) sharks and batoids (Chilean eagle ray Myliobatis chilensis, humpback smooth-hound Mustelus whitneyi, spotted houndshark Triakis maculata, Pacific guitarfish Pseudobatos planiceps, copper shark Carcharhinus brachyurus and school shark Galeorhinus galeus) that feed mainly on teleosts and invertebrates in the benthonic and pelagic coastal ecosystem. This study reveals for the first time the diet of T. maculata and the importance of elasmobranchs as predators of abundant and commercial species (i.e., jumbo squid Dosidicus gigas and Peruvian anchovy Engraulis ringens). The results of this study can assist in the design of an ecosystem-based management for the northern Peruvian sea and the conservation of these highly exploited, threatened or poorly understood group of predators in one of the most productive marine ecosystems.
    URI
    http://repositoriodigital.ucsc.cl/handle/25022009/2815
    Ir a texto completo en URI:
    https://doi.org/10.1111/jfb.14624
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