Royal Society Open Science (Jan 2017)

Jellyfish on the menu: mtDNA assay reveals scyphozoan predation in the Irish Sea

  • Philip D. Lamb,
  • Ewan Hunter,
  • John K. Pinnegar,
  • Simon Creer,
  • Richard G. Davies,
  • Martin I. Taylor

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.171421
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 11

Abstract

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Localized outbreaks of jellyfish, known as blooms, cause a variety of adverse ecological and economic effects. However, fundamental aspects of their ecology remain unknown. Notably, there is scant information on the role jellyfish occupy in food webs: in many ecosystems, few or no predators are known. To identify jellyfish consumers in the Irish Sea, we conducted a molecular gut content assessment of 50 potential predators using cnidarian-specific mtDNA primers and sequencing. We show that jellyfish predation may be more common than previously acknowledged: uncovering many previously unknown jellyfish predators. A substantial proportion of herring and whiting were found to have consumed jellyfish. Rare ingestion was also detected in a variety of other species. Given the phenology of jellyfish in the region, we suggest that the predation was probably targeting juvenile stages of the jellyfish life cycle.

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