‘Vampire birds’: diet metabarcoding reveals that migrating Woodchat Shrikes <em>Lanius senator</em> consume engorged camel ticks in a desert stopover site

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‘Vampire birds’: diet metabarcoding reveals that migrating Woodchat Shrikes Lanius senator consume engorged camel ticks in a desert stopover site

Published in: Ostrich: Journal of African Ornithology
Volume 95 , issue 4 , 2024 , pages: 296–300
DOI: 10.2989/00306525.2024.2386454
Author(s): Crinan Jarrett Swiss Ornithological Institute, Switzerland , Marc Illa Institut Català d’Ornitologia, Nat-Museu de Ciències Naturals de Barcelona, Spain , Marta Burri Swiss Ornithological Institute, Switzerland , Gabriel Marcacci Swiss Ornithological Institute, Switzerland , Vanessa A Mata Universidade do Porto, Portugal , Maria Luisa Boglino Konrad-Lorenz Institute of Ethology, University of Veterinary Medicine, Austria , Oumnia Himmi Mohammed V University of Rabat, Institut Scientifique, Morocco , Ivan Maggini Konrad-Lorenz Institute of Ethology, University of Veterinary Medicine, Austria , Barbara Helm Swiss Ornithological Institute, Switzerland

Abstract

Data on the diets of Afro-Palearctic migratory birds outside their breeding grounds are scarce, despite the importance of feeding during the migratory journey. Here, we report on anecdotal findings from a study in which we used diet metabarcoding to analyse the composition of faecal samples from three Woodchat Shrikes Lanius senator collected during their spring migration stopover in Morocco. Metabarcoding revealed that the prey items most commonly consumed by the shrikes were camel ticks Hyalomma dromedarii. Additionally, in one sample we detected DNA from dromedary Camelus dromedarius, the presumed host of the ticks. Thus, metabarcoding can reveal novel information on the diet of migrating birds using non-invasive methods, as well as insights into secondary consumption by prey taxa.

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