| Literature DB >> 24454797 |
Jackie L Collier1, Sean P Fitzgerald1, Lyndie A Hice1, Michael G Frisk1, Anne E McElroy1.
Abstract
Winter flounder (Pseudopleuronectes americanus) once supported robust commercial and recreational fisheries in the New York (USA) region, but since the 1990s populations have been in decline. Available data show that settlement of young-of-the-year winter flounder has not declined as sharply as adult abundance, suggesting that juveniles are experiencing higher mortality following settlement. The recent increase of blue crab (Callinectes sapidus) abundance in the New York region raises the possibility that new sources of predation may be contributing to juvenile winter flounder mortality. To investigate this possibility we developed and validated a method to specifically detect winter flounder mitochondrial control region DNA sequences in the gut contents of blue crabs. A survey of 55 crabs collected from Shinnecock Bay (along the south shore of Long Island, New York) in July, August, and September of 2011 showed that 12 of 42 blue crabs (28.6%) from which PCR-amplifiable DNA was recovered had consumed winter flounder in the wild, empirically supporting the trophic link between these species that has been widely speculated to exist. This technique overcomes difficulties with visual identification of the often unrecognizable gut contents of decapod crustaceans, and modifications of this approach offer valuable tools to more broadly address their feeding habits on a wide variety of species.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24454797 PMCID: PMC3890304 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0085101
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Primers used in this study.
| Name | Direction/position | Sequence 5’ to 3’ | Tm °C | GC% | Product length in base pairs (with forward primer) | Primer pair name |
| WF200f | For, 75–93 |
| 44.4 | 31.5 | -- | -- |
| WF270r | Rev, 150–167 |
| 40.8 | 27.7 | 92 (with WF200f) | WF92 |
| WF310r | Rev, 185–202 |
| 49.8 | 50.0 | 127 (with WF200f) | WF127 |
| WF400r | Rev, 266–283 |
| 45.5 | 33.3 | 208 (with WF200f) | WF208 |
| FF_A | For, <1 |
| 52.0 | 52.6 | -- | -- |
| FF_2 | Rev, 382–401 |
| 50.7 | 45.0 | 439–459 (with FF_A) | FF450 |
| FF_3 | Rev, 465–482 |
| 51.1 | 50.0 | 519–540 (with FF_A) | FF530 |
| 18S-A | For, <1–19 |
| 58.9 | 52.4 | -- | -- |
| 18S-570R | Rev, 597–616 |
| 58.8 | 45.0 | 618 (with 18S_A) | 18S |
| Uni-MinibarF1 | For, 3–28 | TCCACTAATCACAARGATATTGGTAC | 53.5 | 36.5 | -- | -- |
| Uni-MinibarR1 | Rev, 156–179 |
| 52.8 | 37.5 | 176 (with Uni-MinibarF1) | Unibar |
For: forward primer. Rev: reverse primer. For mitochondrial control region primers (WF and FF), position in winter flounder sequence U12068 is given; for 18S primers, position in EU637075, Kareius bicoloratus 18S rRNA gene is given; for Uni-Minibar primers, position in HM180652, Pseudopleuronectes yokohamae cytochrome oxidase subunit I (COXI) is given. Tm: melting temperature predicted by Integrated DNA Technologies’ Oligoanalyzer program (http://www.idtdna.com/analyzer/applications/oligoanalyzer/). GC%: % GC content of primer.
a exact length varies between species.
Figure 1Selected PCR results.
(1a) PCR amplification of DNA purified from summer flounder (top) and winter flounder (bottom) by primer pairs WF208, FF450, FF530, and 18S. Positions of DNA size standards (1000, 750, 500, and 250 base pairs) indicated in the right column. (1b) PCR amplification of DNA purified from five wild crabs (WC16, WC17, WC19, WC20, WC21), winter flounder (WF), summer flounder (SF), and blue crab (BC) by primer pairs WF208 (top) and Unibar (bottom); last lane shows no DNA negative controls. WC16 and WC17 were positive for both WF208 and Unibar, WC19 was negative for both, while WC20 and WC21 were negative for WF208 and positive for Unibar. (1c) PCR amplification using primer pairs WF208 (top), FF530 (middle) and 18S (bottom) of DNA purified from the gut contents of 12 crabs from the feeding experiment. The first two lanes show unfed, negative control crabs, and the remaining lanes show crabs frozen at various times (1, 3, 7 or 24 hours) after feeding on winter flounder tissue. There was a faint WF208 band in the second 3 hour crab, a faint FF530 band in the first 7hr crab, and 18S bands were present in all samples.
Figure 2Detection of winter flounder DNA in the gut contents of 55 wild crabs.
Categories of crab gut contents found at site 1 (n = 21), site 2 (n = 17), and site 3 (n = 17): Empty, crabs with empty foreguts; Uni-WF-, no amplification with either Unibar or WF208 primers; Uni-WF+, no amplification with Unibar primers but successful amplification with WF208 primers; Uni+WF-, successful amplification with Unibar primers but no amplification with WF208 primers; Uni+WF+, successful amplification with both Unibar and WF208 primers.