Literature DB >> 25545675

Molecular detection of invertebrate prey in vertebrate diets: trophic ecology of Caribbean island lizards.

Tyler R Kartzinel1, Robert M Pringle1.   

Abstract

Understanding community assembly and population dynamics frequently requires detailed knowledge of food web structure. For many consumers, obtaining precise information about diet composition has traditionally required sacrificing animals or other highly invasive procedures, generating tension between maintaining intact study populations and knowing what they eat. We developed 16S mitochondrial DNA sequencing methods to identify arthropods in the diets of generalist vertebrate predators without requiring a blocking primer. We demonstrate the utility of these methods for a common Caribbean lizard that has been intensively studied in the context of small island food webs: Anolis sagrei (a semi-arboreal 'trunk-ground' anole ecomorph). Novel PCR primers were identified in silico and tested in vitro. Illumina sequencing successfully characterized the arthropod component of 168 faecal DNA samples collected during three field trips spanning 12 months, revealing 217 molecular operational taxonomic units (mOTUs) from at least nine arthropod orders (including Araneae, Blattodea, Coleoptera, Hemiptera, Hymenoptera, Isoptera, Lepidoptera and Orthoptera). Three mOTUs (one beetle, one cockroach and one ant) were particularly frequent, occurring in ≥50% of samples, but the majority of mOTUs were infrequent (180, or 83%, occurred in ≤5% of samples). Species accumulation curves showed that dietary richness and composition were similar between size-dimorphic sexes; however, female lizards had greater per-sample dietary richness than males. Overall diet composition (but not richness) was significantly different across seasons, and we found more pronounced interindividual variation in December than in May. These methods will be generally useful in characterizing the diets of diverse insectivorous vertebrates.
© 2014 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Anolis sagrei; DNA barcodes; diet analysis; metabarcoding; mitochondrial 16S DNA; predator-prey interactions

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2015        PMID: 25545675     DOI: 10.1111/1755-0998.12366

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Ecol Resour        ISSN: 1755-098X            Impact factor:   7.090


  12 in total

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Journal:  Genes (Basel)       Date:  2018-12-03       Impact factor: 4.096

4.  Advancing the integration of multi-marker metabarcoding data in dietary analysis of trophic generalists.

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5.  DNA metabarcoding provides insights into seasonal diet variations in Chinese mole shrew (Anourosorex squamipes) with potential implications for evaluating crop impacts.

Authors:  Ke-Yi Tang; Fei Xie; Hong-Yi Liu; Ying-Ting Pu; Dan Chen; Bo-Xin Qin; Chang-Kun Fu; Qiong Wang; Shun-de Chen; Ke-Ji Guo
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6.  Trust your guts? The effect of gut section on diet composition and impact of Mus musculus on islands using metabarcoding.

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8.  Metabolically similar cohorts of bacteria exhibit strong cooccurrence patterns with diet items and eukaryotic microbes in lizard guts.

Authors:  Iris A Holmes; Ivan V Monagan; Daniel L Rabosky; Alison R Davis Rabosky
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Review 10.  Advances and Limitations of Next Generation Sequencing in Animal Diet Analysis.

Authors:  Gang Liu; Shumiao Zhang; Xinsheng Zhao; Chao Li; Minghao Gong
Journal:  Genes (Basel)       Date:  2021-11-23       Impact factor: 4.096

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