A study on the Gut contents of six Leathery Turtles Dermochelys Coriacea (Linnaeus) (Reptilia: Testudines: Dermochelyidae) from British waters and from the Netherlands

Microscopical investigations of the gut contents of six individuals of Dermochelys coriacea from southern England and the North Sea revealed the presence in all of these of numerous nematocysts, mainly scyphozoan. Only six species of Scyphozoa occur in British shallow waters and in the North Sea, vi...

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Main Authors: Hartog, J.C. den, Nierop, M.M. van
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 1984
Subjects:
Online Access:https://repository.naturalis.nl/pub/317798
id ftnaturalis:oai:repository.naturalis.nl:317798
record_format openpolar
spelling ftnaturalis:oai:repository.naturalis.nl:317798 2024-02-11T10:06:48+01:00 A study on the Gut contents of six Leathery Turtles Dermochelys Coriacea (Linnaeus) (Reptilia: Testudines: Dermochelyidae) from British waters and from the Netherlands Hartog, J.C. den Nierop, M.M. van 1984-01-01 application/pdf https://repository.naturalis.nl/pub/317798 unknown https://repository.naturalis.nl/pub/317798 Zoologische Verhandelingen vol. 209 no. 1, pp. 1-36 Scyphozoa Leptomedusae Siphonophora Testudines Dermochelys nemato- cysts British Isles Netherlands food digestive tract anatomy functional morphology info:eu-repo/semantics/article 1984 ftnaturalis 2024-01-17T23:26:45Z Microscopical investigations of the gut contents of six individuals of Dermochelys coriacea from southern England and the North Sea revealed the presence in all of these of numerous nematocysts, mainly scyphozoan. Only six species of Scyphozoa occur in British shallow waters and in the North Sea, viz., Pelagia noctiluca (Forsk\xc3\xa5l), Chrysaora hysoscella (L.), Aurelia aurita (L.), Cyanea capillata (L.), C. lamarckii (L.) and Rhizostoma octopus (L.). For the purpose of comparison and identification an inventory was made of the cnidom of these six species (based on preserved material). Nematocysts of one or more of these species appeared to be present in each of the turtles, all six species being represented. One of the turtles in addition appeared to have foraged upon the leptomedusa Aequorea spec. Small numbers of siphonophoran nematocysts were also found, but these may represent contaminations taken in with Scyphozoa, many of which feed upon other coelenterates.\nAs the extremely watery diet of leathery turtles implicates the intake of large amounts of excess sea-water, speculations are put forward about the way in which this water is removed. In our view this is mainly done by oral expulsion and not primarily by renal and lachrymal gland excretion.\nBasing ourselves on the sparse and very rough data available in the literature, we conclude that the amount of organic matter taken in per day by a fully grown leathery turtle (in its eastern North Atlantic seasonal quarters) may be in the order of 2.5 kg per day (not 8-10 kg as suggested by Duron, 1978), standing for an energy intake of about 11.000-16.000 k.cal.\nThe intake of plastics and other indigestable matters, a phenomenon frequently reported for this species, indicates that it apparently is indiscriminately attracted by all slow moving or floating objects of some size. The fact in itself that it takes such materials proves that the shape of its food items is of little or no relevance. The anthropomorphic interpretation therefore that the leathery ... Article in Journal/Newspaper North Atlantic Naturalis Institutional Repository
institution Open Polar
collection Naturalis Institutional Repository
op_collection_id ftnaturalis
language unknown
topic Scyphozoa
Leptomedusae
Siphonophora
Testudines
Dermochelys
nemato- cysts
British Isles
Netherlands
food
digestive tract
anatomy
functional morphology
spellingShingle Scyphozoa
Leptomedusae
Siphonophora
Testudines
Dermochelys
nemato- cysts
British Isles
Netherlands
food
digestive tract
anatomy
functional morphology
Hartog, J.C. den
Nierop, M.M. van
A study on the Gut contents of six Leathery Turtles Dermochelys Coriacea (Linnaeus) (Reptilia: Testudines: Dermochelyidae) from British waters and from the Netherlands
topic_facet Scyphozoa
Leptomedusae
Siphonophora
Testudines
Dermochelys
nemato- cysts
British Isles
Netherlands
food
digestive tract
anatomy
functional morphology
description Microscopical investigations of the gut contents of six individuals of Dermochelys coriacea from southern England and the North Sea revealed the presence in all of these of numerous nematocysts, mainly scyphozoan. Only six species of Scyphozoa occur in British shallow waters and in the North Sea, viz., Pelagia noctiluca (Forsk\xc3\xa5l), Chrysaora hysoscella (L.), Aurelia aurita (L.), Cyanea capillata (L.), C. lamarckii (L.) and Rhizostoma octopus (L.). For the purpose of comparison and identification an inventory was made of the cnidom of these six species (based on preserved material). Nematocysts of one or more of these species appeared to be present in each of the turtles, all six species being represented. One of the turtles in addition appeared to have foraged upon the leptomedusa Aequorea spec. Small numbers of siphonophoran nematocysts were also found, but these may represent contaminations taken in with Scyphozoa, many of which feed upon other coelenterates.\nAs the extremely watery diet of leathery turtles implicates the intake of large amounts of excess sea-water, speculations are put forward about the way in which this water is removed. In our view this is mainly done by oral expulsion and not primarily by renal and lachrymal gland excretion.\nBasing ourselves on the sparse and very rough data available in the literature, we conclude that the amount of organic matter taken in per day by a fully grown leathery turtle (in its eastern North Atlantic seasonal quarters) may be in the order of 2.5 kg per day (not 8-10 kg as suggested by Duron, 1978), standing for an energy intake of about 11.000-16.000 k.cal.\nThe intake of plastics and other indigestable matters, a phenomenon frequently reported for this species, indicates that it apparently is indiscriminately attracted by all slow moving or floating objects of some size. The fact in itself that it takes such materials proves that the shape of its food items is of little or no relevance. The anthropomorphic interpretation therefore that the leathery ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Hartog, J.C. den
Nierop, M.M. van
author_facet Hartog, J.C. den
Nierop, M.M. van
author_sort Hartog, J.C. den
title A study on the Gut contents of six Leathery Turtles Dermochelys Coriacea (Linnaeus) (Reptilia: Testudines: Dermochelyidae) from British waters and from the Netherlands
title_short A study on the Gut contents of six Leathery Turtles Dermochelys Coriacea (Linnaeus) (Reptilia: Testudines: Dermochelyidae) from British waters and from the Netherlands
title_full A study on the Gut contents of six Leathery Turtles Dermochelys Coriacea (Linnaeus) (Reptilia: Testudines: Dermochelyidae) from British waters and from the Netherlands
title_fullStr A study on the Gut contents of six Leathery Turtles Dermochelys Coriacea (Linnaeus) (Reptilia: Testudines: Dermochelyidae) from British waters and from the Netherlands
title_full_unstemmed A study on the Gut contents of six Leathery Turtles Dermochelys Coriacea (Linnaeus) (Reptilia: Testudines: Dermochelyidae) from British waters and from the Netherlands
title_sort study on the gut contents of six leathery turtles dermochelys coriacea (linnaeus) (reptilia: testudines: dermochelyidae) from british waters and from the netherlands
publishDate 1984
url https://repository.naturalis.nl/pub/317798
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_source Zoologische Verhandelingen vol. 209 no. 1, pp. 1-36
op_relation https://repository.naturalis.nl/pub/317798
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