“…Many of the studies reviewed herein allowed the repositioning of species in aquatic trophic webs and uncovered previously unknown species interactions. The difference in relevance of these new findings for aquatic organisms is presumably linked with the fact that the observation of feeding events or collection of feces is generally less feasible in the aquatic ecosystems, and therefore, previous knowledge was more limited (e.g., Waap et al, ). Examples of such relevant novelties include the surprising finding of cartilaginous prey in the diet of the Australian fur seals Arctocephalus pusillus doriferus (Deagle, Kirkwood, & Jarman, ); the cannibalistic predation of the red lionfish Pterois volitans and its ecological meaning (Valdez‐Moreno, Quintal‐Lizama, Gómez‐Lozano, & García‐Rivas, , which led to the subsequent works of Côté, Green, Morris Jr, Akins, & Steinke, ; Dahl et al, ; Maji, Bhattacharyya, & Pal, ); the confirmation of the occurrence of ontogenetic shifts in the dietary preferences in the largemouth sea bass Micropterus salmoides and sunfish Mola mola (Jo et al, 2014; Sousa et al, ); the detection of a much more diverse prey range than expected for the Adelie penguins P. adeliae and the sunfish revealing a much more generalist feeding behavior for these species (Jarman et al, ; Sousa et al, ); or more recently the high diversity and frequency of bony fishes in the diet of Mobula rays (Bessey et al, ).…”