An academic publishing model in which journals do not charge fees to either authors or readers.

Average time for first decision (excluding desk-rejections): 5 weeks

Animal Biodiversity and Conservation. Volume 45.2 (2022) Pages: 257-267

Diet of the bonnethead (Sphyrna tiburo) along the northern Gulf of Mexico and southeastern Atlantic coast of the United States

Branham, C. C., Frazier, B. S., Strange, J. B., Galloway, A. S., Adams, D. H., Drymon, J. M., Grubbs, R. D., Portnoy, D. S., Wells, R. J. D., Sancho, G.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.32800/abc.2022.45.0257

Download

PDF

Abstract

The diet of a potentially omnivorous coastal shark species, the bonnethead (Sphyrna tiburo), was examined in the western Atlantic along the coast of the southeastern United States. A total of 423 stomachs collected from Texas, Alabama, Florida and South Carolina were analyzed using standardized stomach content analysis methods. The diet was dominated by crabs, primarily portunids (Callinectes spp.), across the geographical range analyzed, though the relative importance of crabs varied between regions. Ontogenetic shifts in diet were not observed throughout the region studied. Female and male bonnetheads in South Carolina displayed different diets, particularly in the amount of portunid crabs consumed, with a higher proportion ingested by females. Bonnetheads consumed limited amounts of seagrasses in all regions except in South Carolina, where they occupy habitats without seagrasses in marsh dominated bays and estuaries. This finding indicates that, at least seasonally, seagrasses are not an essential part of the diet of this shark species and may only occur in stomachs as accidental ingestion.

Keywords

Elasmobranch diet, Feeding ecology, Sphyrna tiburo, Callinectes spp., Seagrasses

Cite

Branham, C. C., Frazier, B. S., Strange, J. B., Galloway, A. S., Adams, D. H., Drymon, J. M., Grubbs, R. D., Portnoy, D. S., Wells, R. J. D., Sancho, G., 2022. Diet of the bonnethead (Sphyrna tiburo) along the northern Gulf of Mexico and southeastern Atlantic coast of the United States. Animal Biodiversity and Conservation, 45: 257-267, DOI: https://doi.org/10.32800/abc.2022.45.0257

Reception date:

29/01/2022

Acceptation date:

14/07/2022

Publication date:

03/08/2022

Share

Visits

2892

Downloads

861

Content appears on: