Introduction
Trophic interactions inferred from feeding habits can contribute to a better understanding of the effects of fishing and climate change on marine resources, although evidence of direct effects of climate change on the local abundance of marine species is limited (Sinclair et al., Reference Sinclair, Arnason, Csirke, Karnicki, Sigurjonsson, Skjoldal and Valdimarsson2002; Hobday and Evans, Reference Hobday and Evans2013). Currently, research has shown that climate change can impact ocean ecosystems through increased water temperature and a consequent decrease in primary productivity (Petrik et al., Reference Petrik, Stock, Andersen, Van Denderen and Watson2020). Considering that these impacts are propagated throughout the trophic web, the diets of top predator species can be considered as a good indicator of changes in the ecosystem due to environmental variability.
Striped marlin (Kajikia audax), blue marlin (Makaira nigricans), and dolphinfish (Coryphaena hippurus) are amongst the most important species for the recreational fishery of Cabo San Lucas (CSL). Striped marlin is an oceanic species that periodically enters coastal waters and is distributed in tropical, subtropical, and temperate waters of the Pacific and Indian Oceans, usually in waters with a sea surface temperature (SST) of 20–25 °C. In the Eastern Pacific Ocean (EPO), its distribution is continuous from southern California (USA) to Chile, and its greatest abundance is recorded off the Mexican Pacific coast (Nakamura, Reference Nakamura1985). Blue marlin is a cosmopolitan, highly migratory species distributed in the tropical and temperate waters of the Pacific and Indian Oceans, generally in waters with SSTs above 24 °C. It spends 90% of the time at depths where the water temperature is 1–2 °C less that SST (Nakamura, Reference Nakamura1985; Su et al., Reference Su, Sun, Punt and Yeh2008). Dolphinfish is a highly migratory epipelagic species inhabiting tropical and subtropical waters worldwide, with its distribution limited by the 20 °C isotherm (Palko et al., Reference Palko, Beardsley and Richards1982; Moltó et al., Reference Moltó, Hernández, Sinopoli, Besbes-Benseddik, Besbes, Mariani, Gambin, Alemany, Morales-Nin, María-Grau, Camiñas, Baez, Vasconcellos, Ceriola and Catalán2020). These species are all distributed in the Pacific Ocean, where the oceanographic event El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) occurs.
The ENSO is an oceanographic event consisting of a warm phase (El Niño), characterized by abnormal warming of the EPO waters, and a cold phase (La Niña) characterized by unusual cooling of the Pacific and the American coast. These events have been found to cause changes in the migratory processes and relative abundance of large pelagic species, since changing environmental conditions, particularly SST, affect the life cycle of many species (Lluch-Belda et al., Reference Lluch-Belda, Lluch-Cota and Lluch-Cota2005). It is now recognized that climate change is decreasing ecosystem productivity in most tropical and subtropical oceans, seas, and lakes, while increasing at high latitudes. Consequently, the presence of ENSO events are predicted to be more frequent and of higher intensity (e.g., Timmermann et al., Reference Timmermann, Oberhuber, Bacher, Esch, Latif and Roeckner1999; Hansen et al., Reference Hansen, Sato, Ruedy, Lo, Lea and Medina-Elizade2006). That is why studies that investigate the behaviour of trophic ecology and its competencies during the cold and warm phases of ENSO are of great importance in predicting species’ behaviour in the presence of these events.
Materials and methods
Sampling for each ENSO phase
The specimens were collected for three consecutive days each month from 2010 to 2011 for the cold phase and from 2014 to 2015 for the warm phase from the landings of the sport fishing fleet that operated in CSL (Figure 1). The organisms were caught by rod and line with either live bait (Mugil cephalus or Decapterus macrosoma) or artificial bait (trolling) between 06:00 and 15:00.
Environmental information
The Oceanic Niño Index (ONI) is the official ENSO indicator at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). It is based on SSTs in the Niño 3.4 region (5°N-5°S, 120°-170°W) in the east-central tropical Pacific Ocean (https://origin.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/analysis_monitoring/ensostuff/ONI_v5.php). ONI values greater than or equal to 0.5 were considered indicative of an El Niño event; values lower than or equal to −0.5 indicated a La Niña event. According to SST anomalies in the study area and the ONI values, the ENSO phases were established as cold phase during 2010 and 2011 and a warm phase during 2014 and 2015. Considering that SST and chlorophyll-a (Chl-a) concentration are two variables closely related to the ENSO (López-Martínez et al., Reference López-Martínez, Farach-Espinoza, Herrera-Cervantes and García-Morales2023), both were used to relate them to prey diversity. SST and Chl-a concentration were inferred from monthly satellite image composites of the AVHRR (advanced very high-resolution radiometer) sensor with a resolution of 1.1 km, taking into account the area of operation of the sport fishing fleet.
Stomach analysis
The lower jaw fork length (LJFL ± 1 cm) for billfishes and curved fork length (FL cm) for the dolphinfish were recorded. A total of 351 stomachs during the cold phase and 448 stomachs during the warm phase were sampled. The stomachs were transported to the laboratory, where their contents were placed in a strainer and washed with water to remove excess gastric fluids and to separate the contents. Prey items were counted and weighed with a precision of ±0.01 g on an analytical balance. When bait was found in the stomach content (identified by its minimal digestion and the evident insertion point of the hook), it was discarded. Likewise, if bait was the only content in the stomach, it was considered empty.
Prey were identified at the lowest possible taxonomic level. For highly digested fish, the identification was based on the axial skeleton, mainly vertebrae, following the criteria of Clothier (Reference Clothier1950), Monod (Reference Monod1968), Miller and Jorgensen (Reference Miller and Jorgensen1973), Barrera-García (Reference Barrera-García2008), Tercerie et al. (Reference Tercerie, Bearez, Pruvost, Bailly and Vignes-Lebbe2022), and McEwan et al. (Reference McEwan, Emery, Quitmyer, Wing and Scudder2022). Slightly digested fish were identified based on the keys by Allen and Robertson (Reference Allen and Robertson1994) and Fischer et al. (Reference Fischer, Krupp, Schneider, Sommer, Carpenter and Niem1995). Hard structures of cephalopods and crustaceans were identified by consulting the keys of Wolff (Reference Wolff1984), Brusca (Reference Brusca1980), and Fischer et al. (Reference Fischer, Krupp, Schneider, Sommer, Carpenter and Niem1995). In the case of squid beaks, identification guides were used based on the studies by Clarke (Reference Clarke1962, Reference Clarke1986), Wolff (Reference Wolff1984), and Acuña-Perales et al. (Reference Acuña-Perales, Córdova-Zavaleta, Arrese-Dávila, Torrejón-Zegarra, Rodríguez-Salazar, González-Pestana and Mangel2020).
The quantification of prey items was based on the number of eye pairs, heads, mouthparts (jaws), telsons, otolith pairs, or other anatomical structures that could serve as a reference for whole specimens (Ortega-García et al., Reference Ortega-García, Arizmendi-Rodríguez and Zúñiga-Flores2017).
Trophic analysis
Using the methodology of Hsieh et al. (Reference Hsieh, Ma and Chao2016), which is a modification to the one proposed by Chao et al. (Reference Chao, Gotelli, Hsieh, Sander, Ma, Colwell and Ellison2014), trophic diversity to infer sample sufficiency was determined from interpolation and extrapolation curves, which allowed us to identify the percentage of the diet calculated from the Hill numbers estimates with 95% confidence intervals.
The contribution of each food taxa to the diet was assessed using the prey-specific index of relative importance (%PSIRI) proposed by Brown et al. (Reference Brown, Bizzarro, Cailliet and Ebert2012) using the formula:
where %FO i is the number of stomachs containing the prey i divided by the total number of stomachs (%FO i = ni/n), %PN i is the specific abundance per prey, and %PW i is the weight of each prey.
The breadth of the diet (Bi) was estimated with the Levin's index (Krebs, Reference Krebs1989). This method allows inferences on the diet breadth by considering the proportion of each abundance of prey present and how they are distributed to the total. The values obtained from Levin's index range from 0 to 1, which derives if the predator is a specialist (Bi ≤ 0.6) or a generalist (Bi ≥ 0.6).
For the determination of the trophic position (TP K), the equation proposed by Christensen and Pauly (Reference Christensen and Pauly1992) was applied:
where DCij is the prey proportion (j) in the diet of predators (i), PTj is the trophic position of the prey (j), and n is the total number of groups.
The trophic position of the prey at the species level was obtained from the FishBase database (https://www.fishbase.se/search.php). For those prey that could not be identified at the species level, the position values reported by Cortés (Reference Cortés1999) were used.
The average trophic position was estimated for each species in both phases and compared them applying a Wilcoxon test considering the normality and homoscedasticity test results.
For the analysis of the trophic interactions between the three species during both phases, the prey they shared according to the % Frequency of occurrence and % Specific abundance of the prey were compared using the methodology proposed by Costello (Reference Costello1990) and modified by Amundsen et al. (Reference Amundsen, Gabler and Staldvik1996).
A permutational analysis of variance (PERMANOVA) was used to assess the trophic overlap in the diets entered by the species. A non-metric multidimensional scaling ordination (nMDS) (Field et al., Reference Field, Clarke and Warwick1982) was also applied to better visualize the overall pattern. A similarity of percentages analysis (SIMPER) was conducted to identify which prey taxa were important in discriminating between species (Clarke, Reference Clarke1993). The studies were performed using the package vegan in R statistical software.
The ONI value was used to define the months in which the cold and warm phases of ENSO were present. The relationship between SST and of Chl-a concentration in the feeding and their trophic competition was determined by applying canonical discriminant analysis (CDA) and a MANOVA statistical test.
Results
During the cold phase, the average SST was 25.1 °C (±2.9 SD), and the average Chl-a concentration was 0.51 mg/m3 (±0.4 SD). During the warm phase, the average SST was 26.6 °C (±2.7 SD), and the Chl-a concentration was 0.52 mg/m3 (±0.1 SD). Total number of organisms sampled per species (N), length range (lower jaw fork length for billfish and fork length for dolphinfish), number and percentage of stomachs with food and empty stomachs are shown in Table 1.
Trophic diversity
From the interpolation and extrapolation curves, 26 prey families were identified in striped marlin trophic diversity during the cold phase (96.1% of their diet) and 28 prey families (98.7% of their diet) during the warm phase. For blue marlin, ten prey families were identified during the cold phase (88.4% of their diet) and three prey families (50% of their diet) during the warm phase. Finally, for dolphinfish, 19 prey families were identified during the cold phase (81% of their diet) and 25 prey families (94.9% of their diet) during the warm phase (Figure 2).
Stomach content analysis (SCA)
During the cold phase, the diet of striped marlin consisted of 37 prey taxa, which were identified and from three higher taxonomic groups: 27 fish taxa (%PSIRI = 53.5), nine cephalopod taxa (%PSIRI = 46.1) and one crustacean (%PSIRI = 0.4). For the warm phase, 45 prey taxa were identified, comprising 32 fish taxa (%PSIRI = 62.1), 11 cephalopod taxa (%PSIRI = 36.2), and two crustaceans (%PSIRI = 1.7). The most important prey species for striped marlin during both phases was Dosidicus gigas (%PSIRI CP = 30.4 and WP = 18.5%PSIRI). Other important prey taxa during the cold phase included the cephalopod Argonauta spp. (%PSIRI = 12.5), the fish Caranx caballus (%PSIRI = 19.3) and Auxis spp. (%PSIRI = 6.6) (Table 2). Important prey during the warm phase (Table 3) also included the fish Lagocephalus lagocephalus (%PSIRI = 15.5), Balistes polylepis (%PSIRI = 11.2), as well as the cephalopod Argonauta spp. (%PSIRI = 11.3).
The diet of blue marlin during the cold phase included 20 prey taxa, which were from two higher taxonomic groups: 17 fish taxa (%PSIRI = 82.7) and three cephalopod taxa (%PSIRI = 17.3). During the warm phase, the diet consisted of five prey taxa which were all fish (%PSIRI = 100). The most important prey species during both phases was the fish Auxis spp. (%PSIRI CP = 46.3 and %PSIRI WP = 50). Other important prey during the cold phase was the cephalopod Dosidicus gigas (%PSIRI = 14.8), and the fish Katsuwonus pelamis (%PSIRI = 8.5) and Caranx caballus (%PSIRI = 4.4) (Table 2). During the warm phase, the fish Selar crumenophthalmus (%PSIRI = 20.4), Ablennes hians (%PSIRI = 10), Trachurus symmetricus (%PSIRI = 10), and Auxis thazard (%PSIRI = 9.6) were also important (Table 3).
During the cold phase, the diet of dolphinfish was represented by 28 prey taxa, which were from three higher taxonomic groups: 21 fish taxa (%PSIRI = 70.5), four cephalopod taxa (%PSIRI = 21.9) and three crustaceans (%PSIRI = 7.6). For the warm phase, 36 prey taxa and three higher taxonomic groups were identified: 29 fish taxa (%PSIRI = 72.9), four cephalopod taxa (%PSIRI = 9.9), and three crustaceans (%PSIRI = 17.2). The most important prey species during the cold phase were the fish Oxyporhamphus micropterus (%PSIRI = 20.1), Exocoetus volitans (%PSIRI = 7.7) and Auxis spp. (%PSIRI = 5.7), and the cephalopods Dosidicus gigas (%PSIRI = 12.8) and Argonauta spp. (%PSIRI = 7.1; Table 2). During the warm phase, the most important prey species were red crab Pleuroncodes planipes (%PSIRI = 15.6) and the oceanic pufferfish Lagocephalus lagocephalus (%PSIRI = 14.6), followed by Balistes polylepis (%PSIRI = 9.2), Selar crumenophthalmus (%PSIRI = 9.2) and Hemiramphus saltator (%PSIRI = 5.6; Table 3).
MANOVA results show statistically significant differences between environmental and prey variabilities on which the three species fed during the cold phase (F (3,85) = 5.17, p < 0.0001) and the warm phase (F (3,86) = 9.08, p < 0.0001).
Based on the niche breadth values, striped marlin (Bi = 0.14 in both cold and warm phase), blue marlin (Bi = 0.22 cold phase and 0.38 warm phase), and dolphinfish (Bi = 0.19 cold phase and 0.09 warm phase) were characterized as being specialist predators during both phases of the ENSO.
The average trophic position, standard error and median values are shown in Table 4. Wilcoxon test indicate no significant differences in trophic position during both phases, neither blue marlin (p = 0.4929) nor dolphinfish (p = 0.05994), but significant differences were found in striped marlin (p = 0.0021).
Trophic competition
During the cold phase, striped marlin, blue marlin, and dolphinfish shared seven prey taxa, including Auxis spp., B. polylepis, C. caballus, Etrumeus acuminatus, H. saltator, Scomber japonicus, and D. gigas. During the warm phase, they only shared three prey: the fish Auxis spp., A. thazard, and S. crumenophthalmus (Figure 3).
Trophic overlap
The PERMANOVA showed that there was no statistically significant trophic overlap in diet between the three species during either the cold phase (F (3221) = 10.77, p = 0.001) or the warm phase (F (3264) = 4.96, p = 0.001), due to the preference of these species to feed on different prey and the low number of prey they shared in their diets. The nMDS showed a stress of 0.06 during the cold phase and 0.01 during the warm phase of ENSO (Figure 4). According to the SIMPER analysis, the prey taxa that contributed most to the similarity between the diets of the three species were from the families Echeneidae, Engraulidae, Enteroctopodidae, Exocoetidae, Hemiramphidae, Hemisquillidae, Munididae, Scombridae, and Syngnathidae (cold phase) and the families Belonidae, Scombridae, Mullidae, Munididae, Trachipteridae, Phosichthyidae, Pholidotheuthidae, Tysanoteuthidae, and Ommastrephidae (warm phase).
Trophic competitions and environmental variability
The first two axes of the CDA accounted for 100% of the variance between groups during the cold and warm ENSO phases (cold phase: 93.1% and 6.9% for axes 1 and 2, respectively; warm phase: 98.5% and 1.5% for axes 1 and 2, respectively). For the warm phase, only one canonical axis was plotted because the number of blue marlin data was very small and insufficient to construct the confidence ellipse around canonical mean (Figure 5). During the cold phase, significant statistically differences (p < 0.001) were observed in predator trophic interactions between the three species, which were associates with Chl-a concentration on canonical axis 1 and with SST on canonical axis 2 (Table S1). During the warm phase, significant statistical differences (p < 0.001) were observed in the interactions of blue marlin with striped marlin and dolphinfish, which were related to their feeding pattern (PSIRI) on canonical axis 1 and with SST on canonical axis 2. The results indicate that changes in environmental variability (SST and Chl-a) affect the presence of prey species and their interactions.
Discussion
Previous research indicates that among billfish species, the sport fishing fleet in CSL primarily captures striped marlin, with a rate of 0.6 fish per trip (Ortega-García et al., Reference Ortega-García, Klett-Traulsen and Ponce-Díaz2003), followed by blue marlin at 0.06 fish per trip (Ortega-García et al., Reference Ortega-García, Klett-Traulsen and Rodríguez-Sánchez2006). Outside of billfish, dolphinfish are the most frequently caught species in the CSL area, averaging 1.33 fish per trip (Zúñiga-Flores et al., Reference Zúñiga-Flores, Ortega-Garcia and Klett-Traulsen2008). The present study similarly observed a higher presence of striped marlin and dolphinfish compared to blue marlin. This might suggest these species have a greater tolerance to changes in SST and greater adaptability to changes in the environment compared to other large pelagic species (Shimose et al., Reference Shimose, Yokawa and Saito2010). The low number of samples obtained for blue marlin might be related to the marked seasonality in their abundance (Ortega-García et al., Reference Ortega-García, Klett-Traulsen and Rodríguez-Sánchez2006). However, the stomach samples in this study allowed us to identify trophic diversity and at least 85% of the diet of these three predators.
In both phases of the ENSO, most of the stomachs presented some food, which agrees with what was reported by Ortega-García et al. (Reference Ortega-García, Arizmendi-Rodríguez and Zúñiga-Flores2017), who describe that these organisms feed at dawn, coinciding with the time in which this fishery is carried out. Therefore, it is possible to find some prey in different states of digestion in the stomach since this is a continuous process (Abitia-Cárdenas et al., Reference Abitia-Cárdenas, Galván-Magaña and Muhlia-Melo1998).
Fish dominated the diet of striped marlin in both phases; however, at species level, jumbo squid Dosidicus gigas was the main prey in both periods. The abundance of jumbo squid in the diet of striped marlin suggests that this squid is relatively constant in the study area over time and that their contribution to the diet of this species varies according to their availability (Abitia-Cárdenas, Reference Abitia-Cárdenas1992; Abitia-Cárdenas et al., Reference Abitia-Cárdenas, Galván-Magaña and Muhlia-Melo1998, Reference Abitia-Cárdenas, Muhlia-Melo, Cruz-Escalona and Galván-Magaña2002; Shimose et al., Reference Shimose, Yokawa and Saito2010; Torres-Rojas et al., Reference Torres-Rojas, Hernandez Herrera, Ortega-García and Domeier2013 and Ortega-García et al., Reference Ortega-García, Arizmendi-Rodríguez and Zúñiga-Flores2017). Similarities were observed with previous studies, as striped marlin continued to feed over the same species through time.
Jumbo squid is an epipelagic species that occurs in areas where upwelling, convergence, or frontal events are common, such as the waters adjacent to Cabo San Lucas, where these predators are found. It can withstand a wide range of SST (16–30 °C), but prefers waters where SST ranges from 17 to 25 °C (Ehrhardt et al., Reference Ehrhardt, Jacquemin, González, Ulloa, García, Ortiz and Solís1982; Ortega-García et al., Reference Ortega-García, Arizmendi-Rodríguez and Zúñiga-Flores2017). The change in the abundance of jumbo squid during both phases could be because it is a species that presents tropical and subtropical affinity (Fischer et al., Reference Fischer, Krupp, Schneider, Sommer, Carpenter and Niem1995), which performs extensive seasonal migrations concerning temperature changes, so during the warm phase due to the lower primary productivity present in the study area its abundance decreased (Nevárez-Martínez et al., Reference Nevárez-Martínez, Hernández-Herrera, Morales-Bojórquez, Balmori-Ramírez, Cisneros-Mata and Morales-Azpeitia2000, Chávez et al., Reference Chavez, Pennington, Castro, Ryan, Michisaki, Schlining and Collins2002; González-Máynez et al., Reference González-Máynez, Nevárez-Martínez, Gallegos-García, Márquez-García and Rodríguez-Sobreyra2013).
The most common prey species for blue marlin throughout the years of study was Auxis spp. Tunas from this genus are mostly tropical species and their peak abundance in the study areas occurs in the boreal summer, when blue marlin is also more abundant. Further, Auxis spp. form large schools, which can facilitate its capture for the blue marlin and, consequently, is part of this species’ trophic spectrum during both ENSO phases (Abitia-Cárdenas, Reference Abitia-Cárdenas1992; Abitia-Cárdenas et al., Reference Abitia-Cárdenas, Galván-Magaña, Gutiérrez-Sánchez, Rodríguez-Romero, Aguilar-Palomino and Moehl-Hitz1999).
Oxyporhamphus micropterus was the main prey of dolphinfish during the cold phase. It is distributed between 1 and 6 m deep in the pelagic zone (Fischer et al., Reference Fischer, Krupp, Schneider, Sommer, Carpenter and Niem1995), where dolphinfish is also distributed. During the cold phase, the sea temperature (25.1 °C) may have limited the vertical distribution of the dolphinfish due to the isotherm limiting their distribution (Palko et al., Reference Palko, Beardsley and Richards1982), therefore relying more on available prey close to the surface. Although this species had been reported in the diet of dolphinfish in the study area, its contribution to the dolphinfish diet was usually less than 5% (Aguilar-Palomino et al., Reference Aguilar-Palomino, Galván-Magaña, Abitia-Cárdenas, Muhlia-Melo and Rodríguez-Romero1998 and Tripp-Valdez et al., Reference Tripp-Valdez, Galván-Magaña and Ortega-García2010), while it accounted for 20%PSIRI in our dataset.
During the warm phase, the red crab Pleuroncodes planipes was the main prey of dolphinfish. Its presence in the study area could reflect its high tolerance to changes in water temperature, being a highly abundant species throughout the year in the waters adjacent to the Baja California peninsula (Salinas-Zavala et al., Reference Salinas-Zavala, Bazzino-Ferreri, Camarillo-Coop, Rosas-Luis, Mejía-Rebollo and Ramos-Castillejos2010). It reaches its southernmost distribution during the spring and summer seasons off the coast of Cabo San Lucas; however, in warmer waters, it tends to have more dense aggregations, which facilitates its consumption by its predators (Stevenson, Reference Stevenson1970; Aurioles-Gamboa and Pérez-Flores, Reference Aurioles-Gamboa and Pérez-Flores1997 and De Anda-Montañez et al., Reference De Anda-Montañez, Martínez-Aguilar, Balart, Zenteno-Savín, Méndez-Rodríguez, Amador-Silva and Figueroa-Rodríguez2016). In addition, it has been reported that P. planipes is frequent and abundant in areas of coastal upwelling forced by winds since they are productive areas and can feed on phytoplankton and zooplankton transported by the California current (Vallarta-Zárate et al., Reference Vallarta-Zárate, Vásquez-Ortiz, Payán-Alejo and Rojas-González2023).
De Anda-Montañez et al. (Reference De Anda-Montañez, Martínez-Aguilar, Balart, Zenteno-Savín, Méndez-Rodríguez, Amador-Silva and Figueroa-Rodríguez2016) described that, under El Niño environmental conditions in 2004, the abundance of red crab was lower, and that their distribution was restricted to greater depths, thus being more susceptible to capture during the night. In contrast, under La Niña environmental conditions recorded at the end of 2005 and the first three months of 2006, its abundance was greater, and it had a broader distribution. This means that its distribution and abundance are associated with the oceanographic patterns of the area, which coincides with the results obtained in this study, showing a greater contribution to the trophic spectrum of dolphinfish during the warm phase. Recently, Vallarta-Zarate et al. (Reference Vallarta-Zárate, Vásquez-Ortiz, Payán-Alejo and Rojas-González2023) described the distribution and abundance of P. planipes on the western coast of Baja California. The authors reported that the most favourable conditions for red crab distribution and abundance occurred at temperatures greater than 16 °C.
Taxa such as Caranx caballus, Auxis spp., Lagocephalus lagocephalus, Balistes polylepis, and Selar crumenophthalmus form large schools (Fischer et al., Reference Fischer, Krupp, Schneider, Sommer, Carpenter and Niem1995), thus attracting higher predators. Therefore, they form part of the trophic spectrum of the three species analysed and reduce competition. Furthermore, it has been reported by authors such as Ortega-García et al. (Reference Ortega-García, Arizmendi-Rodríguez and Zúñiga-Flores2017) that these species have a wide range of tolerance to SST (23.4–30.6 °C), so it was possible to find them during both ENSO phases.
The seasonal fluctuations in the trophic positions of this predator reveal how climatic variations influence dietary preferences. During fish and squid dominance periods, the increased consumption of these prey with higher trophic positions also increases the trophic position of the predators. On the other hand, when crustaceans or fish with lower trophic positions are abundant, the predators could also exhibit lower trophic positions. Our results indicate that during both phases of ENSO, blue marlin and dolphinfish maintained a trophic position similar to that reported in other studies in the study area (Olson and Watters, Reference Olson and Watters2003; Torres-Rojas et al., Reference Torres-Rojas, Hernandez Herrera, Ortega-García and Domeier2013; Torres- Rojas et al., Reference Torres-Rojas, Hernandez Herrera, Ortega-García and Soto-Jiménez2014). For striped marlin, significant differences were found, possibly attributable to a broader tropic spectrum observed during both phases and the greater number of samples. With prey with high and low trophic position, a large variation in the observed values was generated. As an example of this, this predator feeds on the fish Mugil cephalus, which has a low trophic position (TP = 2.5) because it is an omnivorous species, while taxa such as Auxis spp which is also important prey taxa for striped marlin has a higher trophic position value (TP = 4.4) (Whitfield et al., Reference Whitfield, Panfili and Durand2012; Froese and Pauly, Reference Froese and Pauly2023). Currently, there is no evidence that these differences have ecological relevance beyond statistical significance; more research is required to understand the ecological effect of a decline in trophic positions on energy flows in pelagic food webs.
Very few studies include the analysis of trophic competition between these three species. Most only include trophic competition between billfishes or between dolphinfishes and other large pelagic predators (Abitia-Cárdenas, Reference Abitia-Cárdenas1992; Rudershausen et al., Reference Rudershausen, Buckel, Edwards, Gannon, Butler and Averett2010; Torres-Rojas et al., Reference Torres-Rojas, Hernandez Herrera, Ortega-García and Domeier2013; Loor-Andrade et al., Reference Loor-Andrade, Pincay-Espinoza, Carrera-Fernández and Rosas-Luis2017). In this study, seven prey taxa represented their trophic competition during the cold phase, and three during the warm phase. These results coincide with those reported by Richert et al. (Reference Richert, Galván-Magaña and Klimley2015) for the Gulf of California, who mentions that some of the prey shared by these predators are D. gigas, B. polylepsis, Auxis spp., and S. japonicus, which were all reported in this study, as well as the fish E. acuminatus, H. saltator, and C. caballus. Trophic competition was greater during the cold phase than during the warm phase, which could indicate that SST and food availability seem to influence the abundance and distribution of the species and their prey; however, the low number of prey shared during the warm phase could be biased by the low number of stomachs analysed for blue marlin, so these results should be taken with caution.
Nakamura (Reference Nakamura1985) and Ruíz-Pérez et al. (Reference Ruíz-Pérez, Cerdenares-Ladron de Guevara, López-Herrera and Altamirano-Ramírez2016) reported that although the large pelagic ichthyofauna usually share the same environment, they share the resources through differences in the feeding area, time of ingestion or the species that they predate, thus reducing competition. Hence, the division of habitats is important to understand the interactions of these species and to study their ecological differences.
Alterations in biological interactions can lead to changes in community structure and ecosystem functioning, as these changes occur throughout the food web (Hobday and Evans, Reference Hobday and Evans2013). Therefore, examining the responses of individual species to individual forcing factors, while essential, provides an incomplete story and highlights the need for more comprehensive, multi-species analyses at the ecosystem level (Doney et al., Reference Doney, Ruckelshaus, Emmett-Duffy, Barry, Chan, English, Galindo, Grebmeier, Hollowed, Knowlton, Polovina, Rabalais, Sydeman and Talley2012).
Information on changes in feeding habits due to climatic conditions could be useful for fisheries' management of these species, their prey, and other predators with which they share space and resources. This is because many nations depend on fisheries for food security and public revenue (Sinclair et al., Reference Sinclair, Arnason, Csirke, Karnicki, Sigurjonsson, Skjoldal and Valdimarsson2002), and research is needed to relate variations in the availability and abundance of prey and predator to changes in environmental variables such as SST and Chl-a.
Our results revealed that the three species studied play a very important role in the area and can be good indicators of the changes in the structure of the pelagic ecosystem's food web. The information on the variation in feeding habits due to climatic conditions could be useful for the fisheries management of these species and their prey, as well as other predators with which they share space and resources. It is necessary to carry out research that relates variations in the availability and abundance of prey and predators to changes in environmental variables such as SST and Chl-a concentration that helps us predict possible feeding changes or behaviours in the face of global warming.
Supplementary material
The supplementary material for this article can be found at https://doi.org/10.1017/S002531542400064X.
Data
The data that support the findings of this study are available from the corresponding author, upon reasonable request.
Acknowledgements
Amairani Hernández Aparicio acknowledges the grants by CONACYT (Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología) and BEIFI-IPN (Beca de Estimulo Institucional de Formación de Investigadores) fellowship. Sofía Ortega-García and Rodrigo Moncayo-Estrada are granted COFAA (Comisión de Operación y Fomento de Actividades Académicas) fellowships. We want to acknowledge the anonymous reviewers for their careful reading of our manuscript and their many insightful comments and suggestions.
Author contributions
AHA analysed the data, interpreted the findings, and wrote the article. SOG designed the study, collected fish samples, interpreted the findings, and wrote the article. ATV designed the study, interpreted the findings, and wrote the article. UJC interpreted the findings and wrote the article, RME interpreted the findings and reviewed the article, and SABH interpreted the findings and reviewed the article.
Financial support
This study was supported by Secretaria de Investigacion y Posgrado del Instituto Politecnico Nacional through different projects: SIP20100384, SIP20110725, SIP141071, and SIP20150861.
Competing interests
The authors declare no conflict of interest.