Publication | Closed Access
Spongivory in Hawksbill Turtles: A Diet of Glass
281
Citations
10
References
1988
Year
BiologyMarine TurtleBenthic CommunityForagingEngineeringEretmochelys ImbricataNatural SciencesPredator-prey InteractionEvolutionary BiologyHawksbill TurtlesMarine BiodiversityAvian EvolutionMarine EcologySpace CompetitionMarine BiologyMarine BiotaAnimal BehaviorConservation Biology
The hawksbill(Eretmochelys imbricata), an endangered marine turtle associated with coral reefs throughout the tropics, feeds almost exclusively on sponges in the Caribbean, and possibly throughout its range. It is one of fewer than a dozen vertebrates that are known to specialize on this widely distributed but well-defended food resource. The diet is taxonomically narrow and highly uniform geographically, includes sponges that are toxic to other vertebrates, and contains more silica than that of other vertebrates. By affecting space competition, spongivory by hawksbills may influence succession and diversity of reef communities.
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