The California current predator diet database: synthesis of common forage species


Autoria(s): Szoboszlai, Amber I; Thayer, Julie A; Wood, Spencer A; Sydeman, L E; Koehn, L E; Essington, T E
Data(s)

07/08/2014

Resumo

Characterization of the diets of upper-trophic predators is a key ingredient in management including the development of ecosystem-based fishery management plans, conservation efforts for top predators, and ecological and economic modeling of predator prey interactions. The California Current Predator Diet Database (CCPDD) synthesizes data from published records of predator food habits over the past century. The database includes diet information for 100+ upper-trophic level predator species, based on over 200 published citations from the California Current region of the Pacific Ocean, ranging from Baja, Mexico to Vancouver Island, Canada. We include diet data for all predators that consume forage species: seabirds, cetaceans, pinnipeds, bony and cartilaginous fishes, and a predatory invertebrate; data represent seven discrete geographic regions within the CCS (Canada, WA, OR, CA-n, CA-c, CA-s, Mexico). The database is organized around predator-prey links that represent an occurrence of a predator eating a prey or group of prey items. Here we present synthesized data for the occurrence of 32 forage species (see Table 2 in the affiliated paper) in the diet of pelagic predators (currently submitted to Ecological Informatics). Future versions of the shared-data will include diet information for all prey items consumed, not just the forage species of interest.

Formato

application/zip, 103.0 kBytes

Identificador

https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.834750

doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.834750

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

PANGAEA

Direitos

CC-BY: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported

Access constraints: unrestricted

Fonte

Supplement to: Szoboszlai, Amber I; Thayer, Julie A; Wood, Spencer A; Sydeman, L E; Koehn, L E; Essington, T E (2014): Data synthesis for understanding predator forage needs: a case study from the California Current. Ecological Informatics, submitted

Tipo

Dataset