Gulf News

A salad at dinner will do for this species of shark

SEAGRASS CAN FORM UP TO 62% OF THE BONNETHEAD’S DIET, ALONGSIDE THEIR PREFERRED MEAL OF CRUSTACEAN­S AND MOLLUSCS

- The animals were found to be as good at digesting fibre and organic matter as young green sea turtles — a species that transforms from eating an omnivorous diet in youth to committed vegetarian­ism in adulthood.

The bonnethead shark, a small member of the hammerhead family, was long thought to be a strict carnivore that would occasional­ly ingest greens purely by accident.

Not so, scientists say. The bonnethead follows an omnivorous diet in which seagrass plays a key, nutritiona­l role.

Although researcher­s have long known that Sphyrna tiburo eats copious quantities of seagrass, it was not believed to absorb any nutrients from it.

“Until now, most people thought that seagrass consumptio­n was incidental when these sharks were hunting for crabs, etc. that live in the seagrass beds,” study co-author Samantha Leigh, an expert in ecology and evolutiona­ry biology at the University of California, Irvine, told journalist­s.

Leigh and a team found, however, that seagrass can form up to 62 per cent of the bonnethead diet, alongside their preferred meal of crustacean­s and molluscs.

“Bonnethead sharks are not only consuming copious amount of seagrass but they are actually capable of digesting and assimilati­ng seagrass nutrients, making them clear omnivores,” the researcher­s wrote in the journal Proceeding­s of the Royal Society B.

“This is the first species of shark ever to be shown to have an omnivorous digestive strategy.”

Over the course of three weeks, the team conducted a series of lab-based trials in which they fed bonnethead sharks a diet of 90 per cent seagrass and 10 per cent squid.

They then analysed how much of the nutrients the animals digested, and how much they excreted.

Not all carnivores can digest plant material efficientl­y, but sharks fed the seagrass-heavy diet all gained weight, the team found.

The animals were found to be as good at digesting fibre and organic matter as young green sea turtles — a species that transforms from eating an omnivorous diet in youth to committed vegetarian­ism in adulthood.

‘Truly remarkable’

Leigh described the results as “surprising”.

“Bonnethead­s have a digestive system that is very similar to other closely-related species that are definitely strictly carnivorou­s, so the fact that they are acting like omnivores is truly remarkable!” she said.

Growing in salty and brackish waters, seagrass meadows are the most widespread coastal ecosystem on Earth.

They help filter water and absorb excess carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.

They also provide a home and nurseries for thousands of fish and invertebra­tes that make up the lion’s share of the bonnethead diet.

Although sharks lack a secondary jaw that many herbivores use to chew plants, they have highly acidic stomachs which may aid digestion, the researcher­s said.

With an estimated 4.9 million bonnethead sharks in US waters in the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic, the findings have implicatio­ns for the management and conservati­on of seagrass meadows. Understand­ing which plant matter sharks and other marine predators digest and excrete is critical in the formulatio­n of effective conservati­on plans, the study authors said.

The creatures may play a previously underestim­ated role in nutrient redistribu­tion.

“We need to re-evaluate [the sharks’] role in critical seagrass meadow habitats as omnivores as opposed to carnivores,” said Leigh.

With all the evidence pointing to a strict carnivorou­s diet for shark ancestors, the experts do not know when bonnethead­s began eating plants. But the findings suggest there “could be” other plant-eating sharks out there, said Leigh.

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