“…The Atlantic Sharpnose Shark, Rhizoprionodon terraenovae ( Richardson, 1836 ), is the most common small coastal requiem shark in the north-central Gulf of Mexico, USA ( Drymon, Powers & Carmichael, 2012 ). Consequently, much is known about the distribution ( Drymon et al, 2010 ; Bethea et al, 2014 ), movement ( Gurshin & Szedlmayer, 2004 ; Carlson et al, 2008 ), age and growth ( Carlson & Baremore, 2003 ), reproduction ( Parsons, 1983 ; Hoffmayer et al, 2013 ), sexual segregation ( Drymon et al, 2020 ), and population structure ( Davis, Suárez-Moo & Daly-Engel, 2019 ) of this species. The dietary habits of Atlantic Sharpnose Sharks have been particularly well studied and demonstrate that the trophic niche of this species varies spatially ( Drymon, Powers & Carmichael, 2012 ; Plumlee & Wells, 2016 ; Seubert et al, 2019 ) and ontogenetically ( Bethea, Buckel & Carlson, 2004 ; Bethea et al, 2006 ; Harrington et al, 2016 ).…”