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Diet and Plastic Ingestion in the Blackmouth Catshark Galeus melastomus, Rafinesque 1810, in Italian Waters
Animals2023
31 citations
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Score: 50
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Researchers analyzed diet and plastic ingestion in blackmouth catsharks from Italian waters, finding microplastic particles in stomach contents alongside natural prey items, confirming plastic contamination in deep-sea Mediterranean predators.
<i>Galeus melastomus</i> is the most common Pentanchidae in the Mediterranean Sea. A scavenger and opportunistic feeder, and despite the wide distribution, little is known about its feeding habits in Italian waters. The main purpose of this study was to investigate the diet of the blackmouth catshark by analysing the stomach contents. The specimens analysed were obtained from five populations of the Tyrrhenian and of the Ionian Seas, collected from a depth between 40 and 700 m. A total of 259 stomachs were analysed. The stomach contents were grouped into macro-categories and identified to the lowest taxonomic level possible. Crustaceans such as <i>Parapenaeus longirostris</i>, the Cephalopods <i>Heteroteuthis dispar</i> and <i>Onychoteuthis banksii</i>, and Osteichthyes, mostly Myctophidae, were identified. Plastic debris was also found among the stomach contents and classified according to its colour and shape. Osteichthyes represent the most abundant item (44%), above all the Myctophidae family, except for the catshark population from Tuscany, in which the most frequent species were Cephalopods, such as <i>Abralia veranyi</i> and <i>Heteroteuthis dispar</i>. Differences in the plastic debris contents were also observed between the Tuscany population and other populations. These could be explained as a probable consequence of the different depths at which the blackmouth catshark populations were sampled.