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A historical and contemporary consideration of the diet of the reef manta ray (Manta alfredi) from the Great Barrier Reef, Australia
Journal article   Peer reviewed

A historical and contemporary consideration of the diet of the reef manta ray (Manta alfredi) from the Great Barrier Reef, Australia

M B Bennett, F F Coman, Kathy A Townsend, L I E Couturier, F R A Jaine and A J Richardson
Marine and Freshwater Research, Vol.68(5), pp.993-997
2017
url
https://doi.org/10.1071/MF16046View
Published Version

Abstract

elasmobranch filter-feeding mobulid zooplankton
The preserved stomach contents from the manta ray, collected in 1935, that provided the basis for the 2009 taxonomic resurrection of the species Manta alfredi, were examined. The majority of the material comprised calanoid copepods (61.7%) and trypanorhynch cestodes (34.6%), with minor contributions by arrow worms, a barnacle larva and a nematode. Comparison of the size-frequency distributions of stomach contents with that of zooplankton from the Great Barrier Reef region suggest that this manta ray preferentially ingested large copepods, or that the filter mechanism used to extract prey from the water was selective for prey items over 0.8mm in length. This is the first description of the diet of M. alfredi from stomach contents, and is consistent with previous inferences about what this species consumes. Journal compilation © CSIRO 2017.

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Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Web Of Science research areas
Fisheries
Limnology
Marine & Freshwater Biology
Oceanography

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#14 Life Below Water
#15 Life on Land

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