In this study, the diet composition and trophic ecology of four demersal chondrichthyan species; Etmopterus spinax, Galeus melastomus, Scyliorhinus canicula and Squalus blainville were studied in the eastern Aegean Sea. In the stomachs of the samples which mostly consisted of juvenile individuals, a total of 97 prey taxa were identified. Teleost fishes were the most important prey group. The diversity of stomach content ranged between 15 species in E. spinax. and 70 species in S. canicula. The dietary breadth of G. melastomus and S. canicula were found to be narrower than the other two species examined. In addition, high niche overlap scores were detected amongst the species. All of the examined species had trophic levels higher than 4; with the highest trophic level being 4.20 and belonging to E. spinax. Comparisons among calculated trophic levels by global methods and a regional weighted method, which is proposed in this study, showed that the regional method offers remarkable advantages that can be used to reduce the uncertainty of the estimations.
Scientific and technological progresses have introduced diverse data sources for seawater temperature over broad temporal and spatial ranges. Here, we investigated the performance of satellite and model-based seawater temperature data for different temporal composites and depths. We applied an in-situ temperature time-series obtained in a coastal bottom in the Aegean Sea over three years, as the reference. Both datasets showed largely significant relationships based on cross-correlation analyses and presented descriptive properties of the in-situ conditions at corresponding depths. Based on the results of analyses, the modeling datasets presented more reliable results and representations of in-situ conditions than the datasets obtained from satellite for the coastal region. However, the datasets obtained from the satellite also provided reliable data for all time frames investigated, particularly in the mixed surface layer. Monthly datasets were more effective in providing descriptive values in long term studies. This is the first detailed study to explore the descriptive capacities of modeling for water temperature in coastal environments. According to the results, the selection of a dataset as a proxy for seawater temperature requires careful consideration. The present study provides an extensive baseline for evaluating the suitability of the application of specific datasets as proxies in coastal ecosystems.
Hexanchus nakamurai is a deep‐water species, with very little scientific information. This study confirms the distribution of the species in the most eastern region of the Mediterranean Sea, Levantine Sea, in addition to providing some biological information from four pregnant individuals, which is being reported for the first time in the Mediterranean Sea. A total of four individuals were bycaught, in two sets on opposite coasts, three on the 13th of May 2020 from the western coast, and an individual on the 14th June 2020 from east coast of the island of Cyprus. The four specimens, all pregnant females, measured between 107 and 116 cm in total length and between 4,330 and 4,960 g in weight. All specimens were in early pregnancy according to the level of embryo development, which confirms that the size at maturity is smaller than previously reported. In the stomachs, remains of the hake Merluccius merluccius, the cephalopod Loligo vulgaris and two unidentified species of Hirudinea (Annelida) were found. This study provides important new information on the Mediterranean distribution of a globally rare and data deficient species, including an expansion of its known range, dietary preferences and insights of its reproduction biology; the first pregnant females reported in the Mediterranean Sea.
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