Use of molecular scatology to assess the diet of feral cats living in urban colonies

Q2 Social Sciences Journal of Urban Ecology Pub Date : 2021-01-01 DOI:10.1093/jue/juab022
Laura D Plimpton, Carol S. Henger, J. Munshi-South, D. Tufts, Sara M. Kross, M. Diuk-Wasser
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

The overpopulation of domestic cats (Felis catus) presents a serious concern for wildlife conservationists, animal welfare advocates, public health officials, and community members alike. In cities, free-ranging, unowned cats often form high-density groups (commonly called ‘colonies’) around human provisioned food sources. While previous diet studies have primarily utilized morphology-based methods, molecular techniques offer a higher resolution alternative. In this study, we used next-generation sequencing techniques to examine the diet composition of feral cats living in five Trap-Neuter-Return colonies located in urban parks on Staten Island, a borough of New York City. We hypothesized that (1) cats living in urban colonies would still consume natural prey despite being regularly fed and (2) that the composition of taxa represented in the diet of each colony would vary, possibly due to differences in prey availability across sites. In total, 16 vertebrate prey taxa were identified in the diet, 13 at the genus level and 3 at the family level. Despite being regularly fed, 58.2% of cat scats contained DNA from natural prey. The diet composition of the cat colonies differed depending on the land cover composition surrounding the colony with the frequency of native prey positively correlated with the proportion of green space and that of non-native prey with developed land cover types. The use of molecular techniques combined with environmental DNA methods offers a promising, non-invasive approach to assessing the diet and consequently, impact of a highly abundant and non-native predator on the persistence of wildlife communities in cities.
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利用分子粪便学评估生活在城市殖民地的野猫的饮食
家猫(Felis catus)的数量过剩引起了野生动物保护主义者、动物福利倡导者、公共卫生官员和社区成员的严重关注。在城市中,自由放养的无主猫经常在人类提供的食物来源周围形成高密度的群体(通常称为“殖民地”)。虽然以前的饮食研究主要利用基于形态学的方法,但分子技术提供了更高分辨率的替代方案。在这项研究中,我们使用了下一代测序技术来研究生活在位于纽约市斯塔滕岛城市公园的五个陷阱-中性回归群落中的野猫的饮食组成。我们假设:(1)生活在城市聚居地的猫尽管经常被喂食,但仍然会消耗自然猎物;(2)每个聚居地饮食中所代表的分类群的组成会有所不同,可能是由于不同地点的猎物可用性不同。共鉴定出16个捕食类群,其中属13个,科3个。尽管定期喂食,但58.2%的猫粪便中含有天然猎物的DNA。不同土地覆盖类型的猫的食性组成不同,本地猎物的频率与绿地比例呈正相关,非本地猎物的频率与土地覆盖类型的发达程度呈正相关。分子技术与环境DNA方法相结合,提供了一种有前途的、非侵入性的方法来评估饮食,从而评估高度丰富的非本地捕食者对城市野生动物群落持久性的影响。
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来源期刊
Journal of Urban Ecology
Journal of Urban Ecology Social Sciences-Urban Studies
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
14
审稿时长
15 weeks
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