WATER WORLD
Baby tiger sharks eat common backyard birds
by Brooks Hays
Washington (UPI) May 22, 2019

To better understand the diets of baby tiger sharks, scientists have been catching young shark specimens and making them throw up. Analysis of DNA in the shark vomit showed baby tiger sharks consume songbirds.

Tiger sharks are known as the garbage bins of the ocean. When it comes to eating, they're rather indiscriminate. Researchers have previously found evidence that tiger sharks eat seabirds, but scientists were surprised to discover the DNA of backyard bird species -- the genetic signatures of sparrows, woodpeckers and doves -- in the barf of baby sharks.

"Tiger sharks will see an easy meal and snatch it up, but I was surprised to learn that the sharks were eating songbirds -- I assumed that they'd be seabirds," Kevin Feldheim, a researcher at Chicago's Field Museum, said in a news release. "It was one of the coolest projects I've been associated with using DNA to tell a story."

For the study, scientists pumped the stomachs of 105 baby tiger sharks. The stomach contents of 41 sharks featured bird remains. But half-digested birds aren't easy to identify, so scientists sent the remains to the lab for DNA testing.

The test results, published this week in the journal The Scientific Naturalist, showed the baby tiger sharks regularly eat backyard bird species.

"None of them were seagulls, pelicans, cormorants, or any kind of marine bird," said Marcus Drymon of Mississippi State University. "They were all terrestrial birds."

In Hawaii, adult tiger sharks have been documented picking off juvenile albatrosses learning to fly. Authors of the latest study estimate the baby sharks targeted tired or injured birds migrating across the Gulf of Mexico.

"The tiger sharks scavenge on songbirds that have trouble flying over the ocean," said Field Museum researcher Kevin Feldheim. "During migration, they're already worn out, and then they get tired or fall into the ocean during a storm."

The population numbers of most shark species have declined over the last few decades. By better understanding the behaviors of vulnerable shark species, scientists can potentially improve conservation strategies.


Related Links
Water News - Science, Technology and Politics

WATER WORLD
Indian island residents vote with sinking hearts
Ghoramara Island, India (AFP) May 19, 2019
Residents on Ghoramara fear that the votes they cast Sunday in India's election may be the last before their island sinks into the Bay of Bengal - a victim of climate change's growing toll. About 4,000 people, including poor fisherman Goranga Dolui, were on the electoral list for the island in the Sunderban delta. "Those who could, have left already. How will the poor like me leave? We hope the government will help us start a new life," he told AFP. Ghoramara is now about four square kilom ... read more

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

WATER WORLD
Patriot system, transport ship sent to Middle East as Iran tensions rise

Lockheed Martin awarded $84.9 million Navy contract for AEGIS system development

State Department approves $2.7B Patriot system sale to UAE

Turkey to buy Russian missiles despite US 'threats'

WATER WORLD
Boeing nabs $10.8M for Harpoon missile production for Saudi Arabia

F-35C jets to be armed with hypersonic cruise missiles

Raytheon to provide U.S. Marines with Naval Strike Force Missile

Missile contracts surge as US exits arms treaty: study

WATER WORLD
Obstacles to overcome before operating fleets of drones becomes reality

Ascent AeroSystems Announces New Industrial Grade Drone and Launch Customer

Iris Automation offers turnkey collision-avoidance solution for commercial drones

Boeing's MQ-25 refueling drone moved to air base for flight testing

WATER WORLD
Next AEHF satellite shipped to Cape Canaveral for June launch

Airbus and Thales Alenia Space to build two SpainSAT NG satellites

Boeing awarded $605M for Air Force's 11th WGS comms satellite

SLAC develops novel compact antenna for communicating where radios fail

WATER WORLD
Navy awards $22.7M to BAE for three 57mm MK 110 gun mounts

Expediting Software Certification for Military Systems, Platforms

With Insights from Integration Exercise, SubT Challenge Competitors Prepare for Tunnel Circuit

Marines to field enhanced handheld targeting system later this year

WATER WORLD
Yemen arms inquiry poses threat to French press freedom: NGOs

France confirms contested arms shipment to Saudi Arabia

Shanahan: Trump chooses a business manager for defense chief

Yemen war: breaking point in EU arms sales to Gulf?

WATER WORLD
US navy chief does not want China tensions to 'boil over'

US warns EU over 'poison pill' defence plans

US-China standoff heralds risky shake-up of global order: analysts

Top cardinal says 'many questions' remain despite Vatican thaw with China

WATER WORLD
Monitoring the lifecycle of tiny catalyst nanoparticles

Fast and selective optical heating for functional nanomagnetic metamaterials

2D gold quantum dots are atomically tunable with nanotubes

Harnessing microorganisms for smart microsystems