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Article

Stomach Content Analysis for Juvenile Great Hammerhead Sharks Sphyrna mokarran (Rüppell, 1837) from the Arabian Gulf

1
Center for Environment and Marine Studies, Research Institute, King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals, Dhahran 31261, Saudi Arabia
2
Coastal and Offshore Resources Research Center, Fisheries Research Institute, Council of Agriculture, Kaohsiung 80672, Taiwan
3
Institute of Marine Ecology and Conservation, National Sun Yat-sen University, Kaohsiung 80424, Taiwan
4
Environmental Protection Department, Saudi Aramco, Dhahran 31311, Saudi Arabia
5
National Center for Wildlife, Riyadh 12746, Saudi Arabia
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Fishes 2022, 7(6), 359; https://doi.org/10.3390/fishes7060359
Submission received: 17 October 2022 / Revised: 27 November 2022 / Accepted: 28 November 2022 / Published: 29 November 2022
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Insights into Conservation Biology of Elasmobranchs)

Abstract

:
The stomach contents of 30 male and 43 female (age < 3 years; 74–236 cm total length) juvenile great hammerhead sharks (Sphyrna mokarran (Rüppell, 1837)) obtained from commercial fisheries operating in Saudi Arabian waters of the Arabian Gulf were analyzed for the first time. After exclusion of parasites and abiotics, a total of 31 prey items, including the remains of cephalopods, fish, crustaceans, and bivalve mollusks, were identified in the stomachs of 59 great hammerheads. Based on the index of relative importance, teleosts were their main prey, and Platycephalus indicus (Linnaeus, 1758) was the most important prey at the species level. Significant age-related dietary differences were noted (F = 1.57, p = 0.026), indicating that the prey of the hammerheads aged 0–3 years shifted from Platycephalidae to Myliobatidae. Levin’s niche overlap index was low (0.05–0.21), indicating that <3-year-old juvenile great hammerheads are specialized predators. The estimated trophic level was 4.40–5.01 (mean ± SD, 4.66 ± 0.45), indicating that the great hammerhead is a tertiary consumer.

Graphical Abstract

1. Introduction

The great hammerhead Sphyrna mokarran (Rüppell, 1837), which is the largest hammerhead species belonging to the family Sphyrnidae, can grow over 6.1 m in length and inhabits circumtropical coastal reefs, lagoons, continental shelves, and deep waters throughout the world [1,2,3,4,5,6]. Because the great hammerhead is caught by various fisheries operating from the coastal to pelagic zones, its populations have drastically declined in the past three decades [1,5,7,8,9]. This species has thus been addressed in Appendix II of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Flora and Fauna (2012), listed in Appendix II of the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals (2014), and registered as Critically Endangered on the International Union for Conservation of Nature Red List of Threatened Species (2019) [10,11,12].
This species has been suspected to have declined by at least 50% over the past 75 years in the Arabian Sea region, and this decline is expected to worsen further [9]. Life history parameters are crucial for assessing the population status and helping to establish relevant management policies; however, only limited biological information is available for this critically endangered species in the northwestern Indian Ocean, particularly the Arabian Gulf.
Age- and growth-related parameters such as growth function have been estimated for the northwestern Atlantic, Pacific, Arabian Gulf and Australian great hammerhead populations [7,13,14,15,16]. Their asymptotic lengths were estimated to be 264.2 (males) and 307.8 (females) cm fork length in the northwestern Atlantic, and 402.7 (sexes combined) cm stretched total length in eastern Australian waters, respectively [7,15]. Moreover, the reproduction process of this species was studied using samples from the northern and eastern Australian and eastern South African waters [2,15,17]. Size at maturity of Australian populations was estimated to be 210–225 cm total length (TL), and 217–237 cm precaudal length for the South African population [2,15,17]. Litter size was found to be 3–42 individuals with 2-year reproductive cycle, and a size-at-birth of 50–70 cm TL [1,12,15,17]. More recently, the “Sustaining Project-Shark Study” was conducted to assess great hammerheads in the Saudi Arabian waters of the Arabian Gulf between April 2016 and January 2020; only juveniles (aged < 3 years) occurred in this region, and their early growth and reproduction processes were assessed [13]. In particular, the great hammerheads in the Arabian Gulf had larger size at birth and size at maturity than elsewhere, and the growth rates from after birth to the age of 2.9 years were estimated as 83.3 and 22.7 cm year−1, respectively [13]. Studies on the great hammerheads’ diet have reported that these sharks feed on a variety of prey, favoring stingrays and other batoids, groupers, and ariid catfishes [1]. A study found that elasmobranchs were the most commonly found items in the stomachs of eight great hammerheads [18]. Teleosts and elasmobranchs were the main items found in the stomachs of 347 great hammerheads sampled from northern Australia [17]. Great hammerheads preying on stingrays have been observed in the Bahama waters [19]. In addition, through stable isotope analysis, eastern Australian great hammerheads were found to prey on members of the coastal, pelagic, and benthic food webs [20].
Feeding studies will help better define their ecological role in marine communities of the Arabian Gulf [21]. Therefore, the aims of the present study were to investigate diet compositions and to estimate trophic levels for the great hammerheads in the Arabian Gulf based on stomach content analysis. The results of this study provide knowledge on the first feeding habits of great hammerheads in their early life stages sampled from the Saudi Arabian waters of the Arabian Gulf.

2. Materials and Methods

2.1. Study Site and Sampling

Most of the analyzed stomachs derived from specimens (69 sharks) used in our previous paper dealing with maturity and growth of the species, collected between April 2016 and November 2019 [13]. Four further specimens were sampled in January 2020. The sharks (30 males, TL: 75–211 cm; 43 females, TL: 74–236 cm) were caught by several types of gear (trawls, drift and set gill nets, drift and set longlines, trolls, and handlines) and landed at Qatif fishing port and Jubail landing auction fish market (Figure 1). Sexual maturity stage was assigned by macroscopic inspection of claspers and uteruses. Age was estimated by readings of a thin section of vertebra. A more detailed description of the methods is reported in [13].

2.2. Stomach Fullness

Four stomach fullness ranks were considered: Empty, small, big, and full stomach. Empty referred to no or only liquid contents in the stomach; small referred to contents of <50% of the stomach volume; big referred to contents of 50–100% of the stomach volume; and full referred to a full stomach of contents, with even the shape of the contents visible on the stomach. The vacuity index was calculated as the percentage of the number of empty stomachs with respect to the total number of stomachs [22].
Comparisons between sexes, fishing gear (nets vs. hook and line), and stomach fullness ranks (empty and small vs. big and full) were distinguished using the chi-squared test [17].

2.3. Stomach Content Analysis

The stomachs of the samples were weighed, and the contents were recovered through dissection in the laboratory. All of the stomach contents were segregated, identified to the lowest possible taxon, counted, and weighed. To avoid overestimating the occurrence of a particular item, the number of individuals of each content type was determined as the minimum number that these fragments could have originated from [22].
To assess the importance of each prey to the diet, the index of relative importance (IRI) was calculated using the following formula: IRI = (%N + %W) × (%O), where %O is the percentage of prey taxa occurrence in each stomach and %N and %W are the individual numbers of each content type and the total weight as a percentage of each prey taxon, respectively. The IRI values were standardized to percentages (%IRI) according to the protocol mentioned in a previous study [23]. The trophic niche breadth was estimated using Levin’s index (Bi):
Bi = (Σ Pij 2)−1
where Pij is the fraction of N represented by each prey j in the diet [23]. The Bi values were standardized using BA, which ranged from 0 to 1:
BA = (Bi − 1) × (N − 1)−1
where N is the number of prey categories [24]. Lower BA values indicate more specialized diets. A species is classified as specialist feeder when BA < 0.40, as intermediate feeder when the BA value is between 0.40 and 0.60, or as generalist feeder when BA > 0.60 [25].
To assess the trophic overlap in diet between sexes and age groups, the Morisita–Horn index (Cλ) [26] was calculated as follows:
C λ = 2 i = 1 n ( P xi × P yi ) i = 1 n P xi 2 + i = 1 n P yi 2
where Pxi is the proportion of prey i of the total prey hunt by predator x; Pyi is the proportion of prey i of the total prey hunt by predator y; and n is the total number of prey species. The Morisita–Horn index ranges from 0 to 1, with values closer to 1 indicating higher similarities in the prey consumed [24]. A nonparametric permutational multivariate analysis of variance (PERMANOVA) was used to test the shifts in diet across years, seasons, sexes, and age groups [23]. This method allows the analysis of multivariate data, with p values obtained using 999 permutations by applying the R package (R Development Core Team; www.r-project.org (accessed on 22 June 2022)). The seasons were defined as follows: spring (March–May), summer (June–August), autumn (September–November), and winter (December–February) [27]. The samples were grouped into three classes based on age, from 0+ to 2+ years [13].

2.4. Trophic Level

The standardized trophic level was calculated using the trophic index (TrL) [21]:
TrL = 1 + j = 1 n P j ×   TrL j
where Pj is the proportion of each prey category j in the predator’s diet based on the number of analyzed stomachs [21]. The trophic levels of the prey were obtained using FishBase for fishes [28]; SeaLifeBase for cephalopods and Penaeus semisulcatus De Haan, 1844 [29]; and the sources stated in previous studies for Marsupenaeus japonicus (Spence Bate, 1888) [30] and for bivalve mollusks [21].

3. Results

3.1. Gear and Stomach Fullness

The sex ratio (male:female) did not differ significantly from 1 (X2 = 1.11, p = 0.29) for the 73 great hammerhead sharks. One (1.4%) shark was caught using a trawl, 47 (64.4%) using gill nets, 22 (30.1%) using longlines, and 3 (4.1%) using other hook and line gears; thus, 65.8% sharks were caught using net gear, which is significantly higher than the 34.2% caught using the other hook and line gear (X2 = 7.25, p = 0.007).
Of the 73 great hammerhead stomachs, five from male sharks and nine from female sharks were empty. The vacuity index was 16.7% for the males and 20.9% for the females (overall: 19.2%). The sex ratio in terms of stomach fullness ranks did not differ significantly from 1 (X2 = 0.98, p = 0.807). In addition to the 14 (19.2%) empty stomachs, 35 (47.9%) small stomachs, 17 (23.3%) big stomachs, and seven (9.6%) full stomachs were noted. The percentage of stomachs with empty or small status was 67.1%, significantly higher than those with big or full status (X2 = 8.56, p = 0.003).

3.2. Stomach Content Analysis

The stomach contents were identified and categorized into nine groups: cephalopods, elasmobranchs, teleosts, crustaceans, bivalve mollusks, plants (seagrass), insects (cockroaches), parasites (Nematode and Cestoda), and abiotics (hooks and lines). Excluding parasites and abiotics, a total of 31 prey items were identified, including remains of cephalopods, fish, crustaceans, and bivalve mollusk (Table 1).
Their diet mainly comprised teleosts, as evidenced by the highest occurrence (83.1%), number (54.6%), and weight (73.3%), with a %IRI of 93.81%. Elasmobranchs (2.84%) were the second most significant component of the juvenile great hammerheads’ diet. The %IRI indicated that Platycephalus indicus (Linnaeus, 1758) (8.34%) was the most important prey found in the juvenile great hammerheads’ stomachs (Table 1).
Males and females did not exhibit significant dietary differences across years (F = 0.79, p = 0.74) or seasons (F = 1.00, p = 0.45) due to small sample size. However, significant dietary differences were observed across age groups (F = 1.57, p = 0.026), indicating that the main prey items of the sharks in the 0+ and 2+ years-of-age groups shifted from Platycephalidae (particularly P. indicus) to Myliobatidae (particularly Maculabatis randalli [Last, Manjaji-Matsumoto & Moore, 2012]) and from teleosts to elasmobranchs (Table 2), respectively. In addition, the diets of the males and females across age groups were also slightly different (F = 1.36, p = 0.062). The males aged 1+ year preferred to prey on teleosts and favored P. indicus but changed to Epinephelus spp. fishes when they reached 2+ years of age; the females also liked to prey on teleosts after birth, but preferred batoids rather than teleosts in their second and third years of life (Table 2).

3.3. Niche Breadth and Trophic Overlap

Excluding abiotics and parasites from the stomach content items, the values of the standardized Levin’s niche breadth index BA were <0.40 (0.05–0.21) for all age groups of the male, female, and combined sexes, indicating that juvenile great hammerheads aged < 3 years are specialized predators (Table 3).
The Morisita–Horn index indicated that different age groups of the male and female consumed different preys; only males aged 0+ years and females aged 1+ year (Cλ = 0.53) exhibited a high trophic overlap (Table 3).

3.4. Trophic Level

The overall mean trophic level was 4.66 ± 0.45. The mean trophic level for the males was 4.70, whereas that for the females was 4.62. When estimated according to age group, the mean trophic level ranged from 4.76 to 4.40 for males, and from 4.56 to 5.01 for females, indicating that great hammerheads are tertiary consumers (Table 3) [21].

4. Discussion

Although S. mokarran is distributed globally, owing to difficulty in sampling, only a few studies are available on the feeding habits of great hammerheads. This species is not abundant in the Arabian Gulf, and only 2.7% elasmobranch landings have been reported from the Saudi Arabian Gulf [31]. This study examined the specimens obtained from landings in Saudi Arabia. To the best of our knowledge, this study is the first providing stomach content information for this critically endangered shark species sampled from the northwestern Indian Ocean.
The vacuity index of 19.2% for the S. mokarran from the Arabian Gulf was close to a vacuity index of 18.5% for those sampled from eastern South Africa and higher than that for those sampled from northern Australia (12.4%) [2,17]. Compared with other large hammerhead (>2 m TL) species, the vacuity index of S. mokarran was close to that of the scalloped hammerhead Sphyrna lewini (Griffith & Smith, 1834) found in the southern Gulf of California and northern Australia (19.2%–21.5%); moreover, the vacuity index of S. mokarran was higher than that of the winghead shark Eusphyra blochii (Cuvier, 1816) found in northern Australia (14.3%) and the smooth hammerhead Sphyrna zygaena (Linnaeus, 1758) found in Ecuadorean waters (8.1%); however, the vacuity index of S. mokarran was obviously lower than that of the scalloped (67.9–73.2%) and smooth (48.5%) hammerheads found in Taiwan’s waters [17,23,32,33]. Most great hammerheads used in this study were caught using gill nets [31], similarly to that reported for the hammerheads (winghead, smooth and scalloped hammerheads) in a previous study [17]; by contrast, the hammerheads obtained from the southern Gulf of California and Taiwan waters were caught using longlines [32,33,34]. The southern Gulf of California’s longline fishery is operated in coastal and inshore shallow waters (<90 m) using traditional fleets; by contrast, the Taiwan longline fishery is operated 20–200 m deep in offshore waters with a much longer main line and hundreds of hooks [32,33,34]. Therefore, the hammerheads caught from the Taiwan waters were soaked much longer and struggled more than those caught from elsewhere, resulting in a higher vacuity index.
In general, teleosts were the main prey of E. blochii, S. mokarran, and S. lewini found in northern Australia [17] and of S. mokarran found in the Arabian Gulf (Table 1). However, the scalloped hammerheads in the Pacific were found to mainly feed on not only teleosts but also cephalopods for their diet [33,34,35]. For S. zygaena, cephalopods were always the dominant prey item [24,34,36]. However, small-sized (<2 m TL) hammerhead shark species preferred shrimps [35].
In addition to teleosts and cephalopods, elasmobranchs were a part of the hammerhead sharks’ diets, particularly of S. mokarran. Several studies have reported that great hammerheads feed on other elasmobranchs [1,17,18,19]. Compagno reported that great hammerheads seemed to especially favor stingrays and other batoids [1]. Hypanus americanus (Hildebrand & Schroeder, 1928), the southern stingray, is reportedly preyed on by a 3-m-TL great hammerhead in the Bahama waters, the western North Atlantic [19]. An adult female great hammerhead was observed to attack a school of approximately 100 gray reef sharks (Carcharhinus amblyrhynchos [Bleeker, 1856]) and prey on one of them in French Polynesian waters [4]. In northern Australia, elasmobranchs were found in 30.6% of 304 S. mokarran stomachs [17], higher than the 11.9% rate observed in the present study on the same species sampled from the Arabian Gulf (Table 1). In eastern South Africa, elasmobranchs were found in 83.2% of S. mokarran stomachs, batoids being their predominant prey [2]. In eastern Australia, large great hammerheads mainly feed on other sharks and rays, with a preference for benthic species [20]. In the present study, neonatal great hammerheads seemed to be unable to prey on other elasmobranchs; however, this ability increased with age in females, such that at ≥2 years, the females reached the highest trophic level (TrL = 5.0) (Table 2 and Table 3). Other large and more pelagic hammerhead sharks, such as the scalloped, smooth hammerheads and the winghead shark, did not feed on elasmobranchs as frequently as S. mokarran did. Elasmobranchs were found neither in the scalloped hammerhead from the southern Gulf of California nor in the smooth hammerhead from the Ecuadorean and northeastern Taiwan waters [24,32,34]. Elasmobranchs barely contributed to the dietary composition of the scalloped hammerhead and winghead shark in northern Australia (0.3%–0.8%) and the scalloped hammerhead in the northeastern Taiwan waters (0.8%–1.3%) [17,33,34].
The juvenile great hammerheads were determined to be specialized predators in this study (Table 3). In eastern Australia, through stable isotope analysis, adult great hammerheads were found to be specialists that fed primarily on elasmobranchs [20]. Other large hammerheads, such as S. lewini (BA: 0.32–0.39) and S. zygaena (BA: 0.07–0.23), were mostly determined to be specialized predators [24,33,34], although S. lewini from the Mexican Pacific coastal waters was considered an opportunistic predator [37]. Unlike large-sized hammerhead species, small-sized demersal sharks, such as several Scyliorhinidae spp. (e.g., Galeus melastomus Rafineque 1810), opportunistic generalist predators that adapt their diet to the available prey in various environments, seem to be better able to resist heavy exploitation [25,38]. Hence, the impact of target and bycatch fishing for large hammerhead species needs more concern.
Ontogenetic shifts in resource use were detected for several large hammerheads, including S. mokarran. The diets of the Arabian Gulf S. mokarran shifted from teleosts to elasmobranchs within 3 years after birth. Smaller S. mokarran may feed more on teleosts; when they grow, they shift to apex predator roles [20]. Smaller S. zygaena (<150 cm TL) from Ecuador consumed prey of coastal origin, whereas larger individuals fed in oceanic waters and near the continental shelf [24]. Using both stomach content and stable isotope analyses, resource-use shifts relating to size increase were also detected for S. lewini from the Taiwan waters [33,34].
The trophic level estimate for S. mokarran was scanty. The mean trophic level of the juvenile great hammerheads in this study was 4.66, slightly higher than the 4.3 reported in another study of S. mokarran [21]. This value was close to that of the large hammerhead species, such as the smooth hammerhead in the east (4.7) and northwest Pacific (4.82) [24,34] and the scalloped hammerhead in the east (4.22–4.95) and northwest Pacific (4.89) [34,37]. Conversely, small-sized hammerhead species, such as Sphyrna corona Springer, 1940, Sphyrna media Springer, 1940, and Sphyrna tiburo (Linnaeus, 1758), seemed to occupy lower trophic positions and had a maximum TL of 0.92–1.5 m and a lower trophic level of 3.95–4.26 [35].
Among all Sphyrnidae species, S. tiburo had the lowest trophic level (3.2–3.95; always <4) [21,35]. The main reason for this is that seagrass commonly occurs in the diets of S. tiburo [39]. Subsequent studies confirmed that S. tiburo is an omnivore that can digest and assimilate seagrass nutrients [40]. The great hammerhead is mostly a carnivore; however, two seagrass species were found in one great hammerhead stomach in the present study (Table 1). Seagrass might have been incidentally ingested and may not be a common food of great hammerheads. Not only seagrass but also terrestrial cockroach ingestion was found in another stomach; therefore, it can be inferred that some individuals frequented shallower and more coastal waters as their habitat. In other regions, great hammerheads were also found to use inshore, flat shallow water environments (<1.5 m), and young-of-the-year S. mokarran used nearshore, even highly human-impacted marine habitats as its nursery ground [41,42,43,44].
Classical stomach content analysis and the more recently introduced stable isotope analysis have their limitations [45]. Using stomach content analysis with stable isotope analysis on various tissues (e.g., muscles, the liver, and the vertebra) provides insights into the trophic niches at different time scales (from days to years); however, to realize the latest feeding behaviors and food composition patterns, stomach content analysis remains important and difficult to replace. Studies are necessary on the biology and ecology of the great hammerhead, as the second largest predatory shark after the tiger shark Galeocerdo cuvier (Péron & Lesueur, 1822) in the Arabian Gulf and the largest predatory shark in Saudi Arabian waters [9,13,27,32]. Cooperation among the countries in the Arabian Gulf is required for large-scale investigations and beyond, in order to gain a better understanding of the life history of this critically endangered species and devise appropriate management policies and strategies.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, H.H.H. and M.A.Q.; Data curation, H.H.H.; Formal analysis, H.H.H.; Funding acquisition, A.Q., L.J.R. and M.A.Q.; Investigation, H.H.H., Z.N., P.P. and Y.-J.L.; Methodology, H.H.H.; Project administration, A.Q. and L.J.R.; Resources, H.H.H. and Y.-J.L.; Software, H.H.H.; Supervision, L.J.R. and M.A.Q.; Validation, Y.-J.L.; Visualization, HHH; Writing—original draft, H.H.H.; Writing—review and editing, all authors. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research was funded by Saudi Aramco Oil Co. (Dhahran, Saudi Arabia), grant number: CEW02428.

Institutional Review Board Statement

Samples of specimens for this study were obtained from the catches of licensed fishermen as per the Law of Fisheries and Aquaculture Resources Investment and Protection in KSA Territorial Waters. This study complied with all ethical requirements in Saudi Arabian animal welfare laws and guidelines. No experiments were conducted on live animals.

Data Availability Statement

The data presented in this study are available on request from the corresponding author.

Acknowledgments

We acknowledge the Center for Environment and Marine Studies, Research Institute, King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals, Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, for providing manpower resources and research facilities, and we also thank Saudi Aramco Oil Co. (Dhahran, Saudi Arabia) for funding and for continued support.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare that there are no conflict of interest.

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Figure 1. Study area showing the sampling sites of great hammerheads caught in the Saudi Arabian waters of the Arabian Gulf. The dotted lines show the exclusive economic zone boundary of Saudi Arabia.
Figure 1. Study area showing the sampling sites of great hammerheads caught in the Saudi Arabian waters of the Arabian Gulf. The dotted lines show the exclusive economic zone boundary of Saudi Arabia.
Fishes 07 00359 g001
Table 1. Stomach contents of juvenile great hammerheads caught from Saudi Arabian waters of the Arabian Gulf between April 2016 and January 2020.
Table 1. Stomach contents of juvenile great hammerheads caught from Saudi Arabian waters of the Arabian Gulf between April 2016 and January 2020.
Content Items%N%W%OIRI%IRI
Cephalopods2.601.485.0822.250.18
Octopus cyaneus Gray, 18490.650.231.821.590.06
Fam. Sepiidae1.301.241.824.620.18
Cephalopod remains0.650.021.821.210.05
Elasmobranchs5.1921.9211.86345.072.84
Maculabatis randalli (Last, Manjaji-Matsumoto & Moore, 2012)0.6511.021.8221.220.84
Fam. Dasyatidae0.654.821.829.950.39
Fam. Myliobatidae3.255.937.2766.742.64
Ord. Myliobatiformes0.650.141.821.440.06
Teleosts54.5573.3283.0513,948.8493.81
Saurida tumbil (Bloch, 1795)1.305.773.6425.701.02
Saurida spp.1.954.813.6424.560.97
Grammoplites suppositus (Troschel, 1840)1.954.633.6423.930.95
Platycephalus indicus (Linnaeus, 1758)4.5514.8110.91211.158.34
Epinephelus coioides (Hamilton, 1822)0.657.261.8214.370.57
Epinephelus spp.1.309.231.8219.150.76
Sillago sihama (Forsskål, 1775)1.300.261.822.830.11
Megalaspis cordyla (Linnaeus, 1758)0.651.511.823.920.15
Lutjanus ehrenbergii (Peters, 1869)0.652.471.825.680.22
Gerres spp.0.650.241.821.610.06
Acanthopagrus bifasciatus (Forsskål, 1775)1.301.213.649.120.36
Lethrinus nebulosus (Forsskål, 1775)0.650.421.821.940.08
Nemipterus japonicus (Bloch, 1791)0.651.221.823.410.13
Otolithes ruber (Bloch & Schneider, 1801)1.300.381.823.050.12
Siganus canaliculatus (Park, 1797)0.654.711.829.750.39
Pseudorhombus spp.1.300.661.823.560.14
Fam. Platycephalidae3.904.1410.9187.693.46
Fam. Serranidae0.651.981.824.780.19
Fam. Scombridae0.650.571.822.220.09
Fish remains28.577.0449.091748.2969.06
Crustaceans5.843.1011.86113.800.94
Marsupenaeus japonicus (Spence Bate, 1888)0.651.131.823.240.13
Penaeus semisulcatus De Haan, 18441.300.571.823.390.13
Fam. Penaeidae3.251.397.2733.751.33
Crustacean remains0.650.011.821.190.05
Bivalves0.65<0.011.691.180.01
Bivalve remains0.65<0.011.821.180.05
Plants6.490.011.6923.640.10
Sargassum angustifolium C.Agardh 18200.65<0.011.821.180.05
Halodule uninervis (Forssk.) Boiss.5.840.011.8210.640.42
Insects0.65<0.011.691.190.01
Fam. Blattidae0.65<0.011.821.190.05
Parasites23.380.0310.17255.352.10
Phylum Nematoda20.780.027.27151.275.98
Class Cestoda2.600.013.649.480.37
Abiotic substances0.650.141.691.440.01
Hook and line0.650.141.821.440.06
%N: percent number; %W: percent weight; %O: percent frequency of occurrence; IRI: index of relative importance; %IRI: percent index of relative importance.
Table 2. Stomach content spectrum by sex and age group based on %IRI.
Table 2. Stomach content spectrum by sex and age group based on %IRI.
Male %IRI (n = 27)Female %IRI (n = 32)Sex-Combined %IRI (n = 59)
Content Items0+ yr1+ yr2+ yrAll0+ yr1+ yr2+ yrAll0+ yr1+ yr2+ yrAll
Cephalopods0.180.426.830.5800000.040.073.880.18
Octopus cyaneus0.59000.2600000.16000.06
Fam. Sepiidae0014.830.730000009.970.18
Cephalopod remains01.2500.20000000.2900.05
Elasmobranchs06.0400.56014.7085.715.6509.4022.172.84
Maculabatis randalli00000057.982.990024.510.84
Fam. Dasyatidae07.6701.47000002.8200.39
Fam. Myliobatidae0000033.517.029.07012.564.02.64
Ord. Myliobatiformes01.4200.24000000.3500.06
Teleosts98.9387.3388.6196.6193.1776.7714.2990.4297.0283.7970.9793.81
Saurida tumbil000006.0525.03.5702.148.01.02
Saurida spp.1.76000.6206.0301.120.152.2400.97
Grammoplites suppositus00008.46003.272.61000.95
Platycephalus indicus045.5008.6017.0006.585.2416.0708.34
Epinephelus coioides010.9102.12000004.0900.57
Epinephelus spp.0046.82.8400000024.970.76
Sillago sihama000001.4200.3600.6900.11
Megalaspis cordyla1.68000.6000000.43000.15
Lutjanus ehrenbergii04.5300.85000001.5800.22
Gerres spp.01.5500.26000000.4000.06
Acanthopagrus bifasciatus006.190.2801.9600.3800.774.410.36
Lethrinus nebulosus000001.1700.2600.5000.08
Nemipterus japonicus1.44000.5200000.37000.13
Otolithes ruber00001.04000.390.30000.12
Siganus canaliculatus4.40001.4400001.10000.39
Pseudorhombus spp.1.35000.5700000.36000.14
Fam. Platycephalidae2.542.2402.849.13003.516.340.6803.46
Fam. Serranidae000003.6000.6601.3200.19
Fam. Scombridae0.88000.3500000.23000.09
Fish remains82.566.2422.2866.0957.0726.80059.4878.5627.1516.4869.06
Crustaceans0.270.4700.196.45001.782.470.0900.94
Marsupenaeus japonicus00001.14000.440.35000.13
Penaeus semisulcatus00001.16000.440.34000.13
Fam. Penaeidae0.851.4201.153.32001.252.130.3501.33
Crustacean remains00000.40000.150.11000.05
Bivalves000000.2200.0300.0700.01
Bivalve remains000000.5100.1500.2800.05
Plants000002.2500.6300.7100.10
Sargassum angustifolium000000.5100.1500.2800.05
Halodule uninervis000004.6101.3302.5200.42
Insects000000.2300.0300.0700.01
Fam. Blattidae000000.5200.15 0.28 0.05
Parasites0.625.474.562.060.245.8401.420.435.792.982.10
Phylum Nematoda1.9817.2607.56013.3203.830.5622.6305.98
Class Cestoda009.900.400.79000.300.2207.660.37
Abiotic substances00000.14000.040.04000.01
Hook and line00000.49000.180.14000.06
Table 3. The Morisita–Horn index (Cλ) for trophic overlap, trophic level (TrL), and niche breadth (BA) estimated in juvenile great hammerheads sampled from Saudi Arabian waters of the Arabian Gulf for different sexes and age groups (0+ to 2+ years).
Table 3. The Morisita–Horn index (Cλ) for trophic overlap, trophic level (TrL), and niche breadth (BA) estimated in juvenile great hammerheads sampled from Saudi Arabian waters of the Arabian Gulf for different sexes and age groups (0+ to 2+ years).
Sex and Age ClassMaleFemaleAll MaleAll FemaleSex CombinedTrLBA
0+1+2+0+1+2+0+1+2+Lower Taxa
(Order to species)
Group Class
M 0+, n = 16-----------4.760.050.03
M 1+, n = 80.007----------4.710.210.16
M 2+, n = 300---------4.400.080.16
F 0+, n = 200.040.530--------4.560.130.10
F 1+ yr, n = 90.1200.0030-------4.610.100.23
F, 2+ yr, n = 300000.08------5.010.060.13
All male, n = 27-----------4.700.120.07
All female, n = 32------0.23----4.620.160.20
All 0+, n = 36-----------4.650.100.07
All 1+, n = 17--------0.34--4.650.160.22
All 2+, n = 6--------00.04-4.700.150.21
M: male; F: female.
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Hsu, H.H.; Nazeer, Z.; Panickan, P.; Lin, Y.-J.; Qasem, A.; Rabaoui, L.J.; Qurban, M.A. Stomach Content Analysis for Juvenile Great Hammerhead Sharks Sphyrna mokarran (Rüppell, 1837) from the Arabian Gulf. Fishes 2022, 7, 359. https://doi.org/10.3390/fishes7060359

AMA Style

Hsu HH, Nazeer Z, Panickan P, Lin Y-J, Qasem A, Rabaoui LJ, Qurban MA. Stomach Content Analysis for Juvenile Great Hammerhead Sharks Sphyrna mokarran (Rüppell, 1837) from the Arabian Gulf. Fishes. 2022; 7(6):359. https://doi.org/10.3390/fishes7060359

Chicago/Turabian Style

Hsu, Hua Hsun, Zahid Nazeer, Premlal Panickan, Yu-Jia Lin, Ali Qasem, Lotfi Jilani Rabaoui, and Mohammad Ali Qurban. 2022. "Stomach Content Analysis for Juvenile Great Hammerhead Sharks Sphyrna mokarran (Rüppell, 1837) from the Arabian Gulf" Fishes 7, no. 6: 359. https://doi.org/10.3390/fishes7060359

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