Biology Open (Oct 2022)

In vitro forestomach digestion experiments give less-biased estimates of food composition in odontocetes

  • Lisa Klemens,
  • Carolin Julie Neven,
  • Tom Bär,
  • Uwe Krumme,
  • Michael Dähne

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1242/bio.059440
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 10

Abstract

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Diet composition of odontocetes is usually inferred from stomach content analyses and accounts for digestion rates derived from in vitro digestion experiments based on seal physiology. However, pinnipeds, being carnivores, have only one stomach compartment, while odontocetes, being cetartiodactyla, have up to four. Inappropriate extrapolation from digestion processes in simulated seal stomachs may result in biased estimates of odontocete diets. We simulated a forestomach accounting for muscle contractions and a pH=4 using in vitro experiments with three fish species. Whiting (Merlangius merlangus), black goby (Gobius niger) and sprat (Sprattus sprattus) showed highly variable exponential, sigmoid or linear digestion functions, and high digestion rates, taking between 50 and 230 min for completed digestion. Previous pinniped models (pH=2, lacking simulated muscular digestion) showed much slower and more similar digestion process. Our results suggest that present biomass intake estimates of odontocetes are biased towards bigger and fattier fish and need to be revised in general.

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