2012
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-294x.2011.05424.x
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Carnivore diet analysis based on next‐generation sequencing: application to the leopard cat (Prionailurus bengalensis) in Pakistan

Abstract: Diet analysis is a prerequisite to fully understand the biology of a species and the functioning of ecosystems. For carnivores, traditional diet analyses mostly rely upon the morphological identification of undigested remains in the faeces. Here, we developed a methodology for carnivore diet analyses based on the next-generation sequencing. We applied this approach to the analysis of the vertebrate component of leopard cat diet in two ecologically distinct regions in northern Pakistan. Despite being a relative… Show more

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Cited by 274 publications
(266 citation statements)
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“…Each sequence was then assigned to unique taxa. If no complete match between a unique sequence in the database and the query sequence was found, the allotted taxa corresponded to the last common node in the NCBI taxonomic tree of all the taxids that annotated the sequences and matched the query sequence 50 . Only sequences corresponding to the Viridiplantae phylum when using plant primers and to the Mammalia class when using the mammalian primers were saved for the following steps.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Each sequence was then assigned to unique taxa. If no complete match between a unique sequence in the database and the query sequence was found, the allotted taxa corresponded to the last common node in the NCBI taxonomic tree of all the taxids that annotated the sequences and matched the query sequence 50 . Only sequences corresponding to the Viridiplantae phylum when using plant primers and to the Mammalia class when using the mammalian primers were saved for the following steps.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…2010; Shehzad et al . 2012), screening for the presence of invasive species in the bait trade (Mahon et al . 2014), and to a lesser extent biodiversity profiling (Thomsen et al .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This method has been used to non-invasively Kartzinel et al, 2015), Hawaiin tree snails (Achatinella spp. ; O'Rorke et al, 2015;Price et al, 2017) and leopard cats (Prionailurus bengalensis; Shehzad et al, 2012). Limitations of this approach can include a lack of reference samples against which to compare generated data and the fact that findings should be considered semi-quantitative, due to biases such as preferential digestion, PCR amplification bias and gene copy variation (Deagle et al, 2010;Pompanon et al, 2012).…”
Section: Health and Dietmentioning
confidence: 99%