Diet of nestling Barn Swallows in an agroecosystem: insights from fecal DNA barcoding and feather stable isotopes (δ13C, δ15N)

Author(s):  
Jackson W. Kusack ◽  
Greg W. Mitchell ◽  
Dean R. Evans ◽  
Michael D. Cadman ◽  
Jenny L. McCune ◽  
...  
DNA Barcodes ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Fumiko Nakahara ◽  
Haruko Ando ◽  
Hideyuki Ito ◽  
Asako Murakami ◽  
Naoki Morimoto ◽  
...  

AbstractIn Japan, overgrazing by sika deer (Cervus nippon) has been suggested to cause a decline in forest understory vegetation. DNA barcoding has become an accepted method for analyzing the diets of animals and may be useful for evaluating the impact of sika deer on vegetation. However, the applicability of DNA barcoding in the dietary analysis of sika deer, particularly whether all of the food plants can be detected with sufficient taxonomic resolution and whether the results can be evaluated quantitatively, has not been investigated. We conducted a feeding trial by feeding five plant species to a captive sika deer and sequenced the chloroplast trnL P6 loop region from the sika deer’s fecal DNA using the Ion PGM sequencer. We detected the sequences of all of the food plants at the species level using the local (selfproduced) database and at the genus or family level with the global database. Although the sequences of some major food plants were detected with high frequency, the proportion of consumed food plants did not match the proportion of sequences obtained from fecal DNA. With further technical advances and the further completeness of the sequence database for vegetation, DNA barcoding will be a useful tool for the dietary study of sika deer.


The Auk ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 136 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Beverly McClenaghan ◽  
Erica Nol ◽  
Kevin C R Kerr

Abstract Aerial insectivores are highly mobile predators that feed on diverse prey items that have highly variable distributions. As such, investigating the diet, prey selection and prey availability of aerial insectivores can be challenging. In this study, we used an integrated DNA barcoding method to investigate the diet and food supply of Barn Swallows, an aerial insectivore whose North American population has declined over the past 40 yr. We tested the hypotheses that Barn Swallows are generalist insectivores when provisioning their young and select prey based on size. We predicted that the diets of nestlings would contain a range of insect taxa but would be biased towards large prey items and that the diet of nestlings would change as prey availability changed. We collected insects using Malaise traps at 10 breeding sites and identified specimens using standard DNA barcoding. The sequences from these insect specimens were used to create a custom reference database of prey species and their relative sizes for our study area. We identified insect prey items from nestling fecal samples by using high-throughput DNA sequencing and comparing the sequences to our custom reference database. Barn Swallows fed nestlings prey items from 130 families representing 13 orders but showed selection for larger prey items that were predominantly from 7 dipteran families. Nestling diet varied both within and between breeding seasons as well as between breeding sites. This dietary flexibility suggests that Barn Swallows are able to adjust their provisioning to changing prey availability on the breeding grounds when feeding their nestlings. Our study demonstrates the utility of custom reference databases for linking the abundance and size of insect prey in the habitat with prey consumed when employing molecular methods for dietary analysis.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 2225-2237
Author(s):  
Jan A. C. Rönn ◽  
Martin U. Grüebler ◽  
Thord Fransson ◽  
Ulrich Köppen ◽  
Fränzi Korner‐Nievergelt

PLoS ONE ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 13 (9) ◽  
pp. e0202025 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nina Seifert ◽  
Roberto Ambrosini ◽  
Luana Bontempo ◽  
Federica Camin ◽  
Felix Liechti ◽  
...  

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