Using DNA Metabarcoding to Characterize the Prey Spectrum of Two Co-Occurring Themisto Amphipods in the Rapidly Changing Atlantic-Arctic Gateway Fram Strait

Genes (Basel). 2022 Nov 4;13(11):2035. doi: 10.3390/genes13112035.

Abstract

The two congeneric hyperiids Themisto libellula and T. abyssorum provide an important trophic link between lower and higher trophic levels in the rapidly changing Arctic marine ecosystem. These amphipods are characterized by distinct hydrographic affinities and are hence anticipated to be impacted differently by environmental changes, with major consequences for the Arctic food web. In this study, we applied DNA metabarcoding to the stomach contents of these Themisto species, to comprehensively reveal their prey spectra at an unprecedented-high-taxonomic-resolution and assess the regional variation in their diet across the Fram Strait. Both species feed on a wide variety of prey but their diet strongly differed in the investigated summer season, showing overlap for only a few prey taxa, such as calanoid copepods. The spatially structured prey field of T. libellula clearly differentiated it from T. abyssorum, of which the diet was mainly dominated by chaetognaths. Our approach also allowed the detection of previously overlooked prey in the diet of T. libellula, such as fish species and gelatinous zooplankton. We discuss the reasons for the differences in prey spectra and which consequences these may have in the light of ongoing environmental changes.

Keywords: Arctic Ocean; DNA metabarcoding; Hyperiidae; Themisto abyssorum; Themisto libellula; atlantification; cytochrome c oxidase subunit I; diet analyses; gelatinous zooplankton.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Amphipoda* / genetics
  • Animals
  • Arctic Regions
  • DNA Barcoding, Taxonomic
  • Ecosystem
  • Zooplankton / genetics

Grants and funding

This study was conducted in the framework of the Helmholtz Young Investigator Group “ARJEL—Arctic Jellies” with the project number VH-NG-1400, funded by the Helmholtz Society and the Alfred Wegener Institute Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research. This work was partly supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) in the framework of the priority programme “Antarctic Research with comparative investigations in Arctic ice areas” SPP 1158 by the following grant: HA 7627/1-1, to the last author. KP was supported by a strategic funding from UiT—The Arctic University of Norway. Data for this manuscript was produced during the ship time allocated to the R/V Polarstern project AMICA with project ID AWI PS100 07, the R/V Polarstern project AWI PS107 10 and the ship time allocated to the R/V Helmer Hanssen project TUNU.