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Dive into the research topics where Jeremy J. Vaudo is active.

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Featured researches published by Jeremy J. Vaudo.


Biological Reviews | 2012

Applying stable isotopes to examine food-web structure: an overview of analytical tools

Craig A. Layman; Márcio S. Araújo; Ross E. Boucek; Caroline M. Hammerschlag-Peyer; Elizabeth Harrison; Zachary R. Jud; Philip Matich; Adam E. Rosenblatt; Jeremy J. Vaudo; Lauren A. Yeager; David M. Post; Stuart Bearhop

Stable isotope analysis has emerged as one of the primary means for examining the structure and dynamics of food webs, and numerous analytical approaches are now commonly used in the field. Techniques range from simple, qualitative inferences based on the isotopic niche, to Bayesian mixing models that can be used to characterize food‐web structure at multiple hierarchical levels. We provide a comprehensive review of these techniques, and thus a single reference source to help identify the most useful approaches to apply to a given data set. We structure the review around four general questions: (1) what is the trophic position of an organism in a food web?; (2) which resource pools support consumers?; (3) what additional information does relative position of consumers in isotopic space reveal about food‐web structure?; and (4) what is the degree of trophic variability at the intrapopulation level? For each general question, we detail different approaches that have been applied, discussing the strengths and weaknesses of each. We conclude with a set of suggestions that transcend individual analytical approaches, and provide guidance for future applications in the field.


Journal of Fish Biology | 2010

Mother–offspring isotope fractionation in two species of placentatrophic sharks

Jeremy J. Vaudo; Philip Matich; Michael R. Heithaus

Stable-isotope values of a scalloped hammerhead Sphyrna lewini and blacktip shark Carcharhinus limbatus and their respective embryos were analysed. Embryos of both species were enriched in δ(15) N compared to their mothers (0·82 and 0·88‰, respectively), but fractionation of δ(13) C varied. Embryonic S. lewini were enriched (1·00‰) in δ(13) C while C. limbatus were depleted (0·27‰) relative to their mothers.


Marine and Freshwater Research | 2012

Diel and Seasonal Variation in the Use of a Nearshore Sandflat by a Ray Community in a Near Pristine System

Jeremy J. Vaudo; Michael R. Heithaus

Knowledge of movements and habitat use is necessary to assess a species’ ecological role and is especially important for mesopredators because they provide the link between upper and lower trophic levels. Using acoustic telemetry, we examined coarse-scale diel and seasonal movements of elasmobranch mesopredators on a shallow sandflat in Shark Bay, Western Australia. Giant shovelnose rays (Glaucostegus typus) and reticulate whiprays (Himantura uarnak) were most often detected in nearshore microhabitats and were regularly detected throughout the day and year, although reticulate whiprays tended to frequent the monitored array over longer periods. Pink whiprays (H. fai) and cowtail stingrays (Pastinachus atrus) were also detected throughout the day, but were far less frequently detected. Overall, there was no apparent spatial or temporal partitioning of the sandflats, but residency to the area varied between species. In addition, ray presence throughout the year suggests that previously observed differences in seasonal abundance are likely because of seasonal changes in habitat use rather than large-scale migrations. Continuous use of the sandflats and limited movements within this ray community suggests that rays have the potential to be a structuring force on this system and that focusing on nearshore habitats is important for managing subtropical ray populations.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Perceived Risk of Predation Affects Reproductive Life-History Traits in Gambusia holbrooki, but Not in Heterandria formosa

Shomen Mukherjee; Michael R. Heithaus; Joel C. Trexler; Jayanti Ray-Mukherjee; Jeremy J. Vaudo

Key to predicting impacts of predation is understanding the mechanisms through which predators impact prey populations. While consumptive effects are well-known, non-consumptive predator effects (risk effects) are increasingly being recognized as important. Studies of risk effects, however, have focused largely on how trade-offs between food and safety affect fitness. Less documented, and appreciated, is the potential for predator presence to directly suppress prey reproduction and affect life-history characteristics. For the first time, we tested the effects of visual predator cues on reproduction of two prey species with different reproductive modes, lecithotrophy (i.e. embryonic development primarily fueled by yolk) and matrotrophy (i.e. energy for embryonic development directly supplied by the mother to the embryo through a vascular connection). Predation risk suppressed reproduction in the lecithotrophic prey (Gambusia holbrokii) but not the matrotroph (Heterandria formosa). Predator stress caused G. holbrooki to reduce clutch size by 43%, and to produce larger and heavier offspring compared to control females. H. formosa, however, did not show any such difference. In G. holbrooki we also found a significantly high percentage (14%) of stillbirths in predator-exposed treatments compared to controls (2%). To the best of our knowledge, this is the first direct empirical evidence of predation stress affecting stillbirths in prey. Our results suggest that matrotrophy, superfetation (clutch overlap), or both decrease the sensitivity of mothers to environmental fluctuation in resource (food) and stress (predation risk) levels compared to lecithotrophy. These mechanisms should be considered both when modeling consequences of perceived risk of predation on prey-predator population dynamics and when seeking to understand the evolution of reproductive modes.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Microhabitat Selection by Marine Mesoconsumers in a Thermally Heterogeneous Habitat: Behavioral Thermoregulation or Avoiding Predation Risk?

Jeremy J. Vaudo; Michael R. Heithaus

Habitat selection decisions by consumers has the potential to shape ecosystems. Understanding the factors that influence habitat selection is therefore critical to understanding ecosystem function. This is especially true of mesoconsumers because they provide the link between upper and lower tropic levels. We examined the factors influencing microhabitat selection of marine mesoconsumers – juvenile giant shovelnose rays (Glaucostegus typus), reticulate whiprays (Himantura uarnak), and pink whiprays (H. fai) – in a coastal ecosystem with intact predator and prey populations and marked spatial and temporal thermal heterogeneity. Using a combination of belt transects and data on water temperature, tidal height, prey abundance, predator abundance and ray behavior, we found that giant shovelnose rays and reticulate whiprays were most often found resting in nearshore microhabitats, especially at low tidal heights during the warm season. Microhabitat selection did not match predictions derived from distributions of prey. Although at a course scale, ray distributions appeared to match predictions of behavioral thermoregulation theory, fine-scale examination revealed a mismatch. The selection of the shallow nearshore microhabitat at low tidal heights during periods of high predator abundance (warm season) suggests that this microhabitat may serve as a refuge, although it may come with metabolic costs due to higher temperatures. The results of this study highlight the importance of predators in the habitat selection decisions of mesoconsumers and that within thermal gradients, factors, such as predation risk, must be considered in addition to behavioral thermoregulation to explain habitat selection decisions. Furthermore, increasing water temperatures predicted by climate change may result in complex trade-offs that might have important implications for ecosystem dynamics.


Archive | 2011

High-Trophic-Level Consumers

Jeremy J. Vaudo; Michael R. Heithaus

Coastal elasmobranchs tend to be upper-level predators, which may exert top-down impacts on the systems they inhabit; but surprisingly little is known of their trophic ecology. In this chapter, we review the trophic interactions of coastal elasmobranchs as prey, predators, and competitors. We also explore factors that affect these relationships and elasmobranch interactions within key coastal habitats.


Archive | 2011

High-Trophic-Level Consumers: Elasmobranchs

Jeremy J. Vaudo; Michael R. Heithaus

Coastal elasmobranchs tend to be upper-level predators, which may exert top-down impacts on the systems they inhabit; but surprisingly little is known of their trophic ecology. In this chapter, we review the trophic interactions of coastal elasmobranchs as prey, predators, and competitors. We also explore factors that affect these relationships and elasmobranch interactions within key coastal habitats.


Archive | 2012

Predator-Prey Interactions

Michael R. Heithaus; Jeremy J. Vaudo


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2011

Dietary niche overlap in a nearshore elasmobranch mesopredator community

Jeremy J. Vaudo; Michael R. Heithaus


Archive | 2010

Unraveling the Ecological Importance of Elasmobranchs

Michael R. Heithaus; Alejandro Frid; Jeremy J. Vaudo; Boris Worm; Aaron J. Wirsing

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Michael R. Heithaus

Florida International University

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Guy Harvey

Nova Southeastern University

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Philip Matich

Florida International University

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Craig A. Layman

North Carolina State University

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