As regular CFZ-watchers will know, for some time Corinna has been doing a column for Animals & Men and a regular segment on On The Track... particularly about out-of-place birds and rare vagrants. There seem to be more and more bird stories from all over the world hitting the news these days so, to make room for them all - and to give them all equal and worthy coverage - she has set up this new blog to cover all things feathery and Fortean.

Friday 5 February 2016

DNA analysis of sandpiper feces reveals a broad diet


Date:February 3, 2016
Source:Central Ornithology Publication Office

The researchers behind a forthcoming study in The Auk: Ornithological Advanceshave shown that Semipalmated Sandpipers on their annual stopover in Canada's Bay of Fundy eat a far broader diet than anyone suspected--and they did it by analyzing poop.

Analysis of stomach contents had led researchers to believe that Semipalmated Sandpipers in the Bay of Fundy rely on an amphipod species called Corophium volutator as their major food source. However, the new study of feces by Travis Gerwing, Myriam Barbeau, Diana Hamilton, Jason Addison, and Jin-Hong Kim of the University of New Brunswick shows that the sandpipers' diet knits together several adjacent food webs--freshwater insects that wash down onto the beach in streams and eggs of ocean-going fish deposited on the shore by tides get eaten alongside organisms that live in the beach's intertidal zone.

This broader diet may increase their exposure to pesticides and other toxins, in addition to making the birds more resilient to changes in their habitat, such as those due to climate change. "Current Semipalmated Sandpiper conservation efforts in the Bay of Fundy focus on beach and intertidal habitats, neglecting terrestrial, pelagic, and freshwater systems that may not only supply nutrients, but harmful chemicals or pesticides as well," according to Gerwing. "Future studies need to explore this possibility, attempting to determine if bioaccumulation of harmful toxins from multiple ecosystems in the Semipalmated Sandpipers are having any negative impacts upon this species."

Gerwing and his colleagues obtained their data using a technique called "molecular scatology"--analyzing the DNA contained in the sandpipers' feces. "The best part of molecular scatology is that it can be entirely non-invasive. I never touched a single Semipalmated Sandpiper," says Gerwing. "I would get to relax on a beach with my wife (a very hard life) and watch these birds forage through our binoculars. Once they naturally moved on, we would run down to where they were foraging and pick up their feces. My poor wife had to watch as I spent the next few minutes crawling over rocks and mud, picking up bird poop with a pair of sterile tweezers."


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