New publication: Multi-method approach to analyse harbour porpoises diet
Dear MARMAM community,
On behalf of my co-authors and myself, I am very pleased to share our latest 
publication in Marine Ecology Progress Series (MEPS), which reports on the use 
of a multi-method approach to reveal temporal differences in the diet of 
individual harbour porpoises in the southern North Sea.

Heße, E., Boyi, J. O., Das, K., Jung, K., Lehnert, K., Piette, M., Pinzone, M., 
Schückel, S., Schückel, U., Siebert, U., & Gilles, A.

(2025). A multi-method approach reveals long- and short-term dietary 
differences in individual harbour porpoises Phocoena

phocoena in the southern North Sea. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 755, 
115-132.

https://www.int-res.com/abstracts/meps/v755/p115-132/


Abstract:
Understanding predator-prey relationships is essential for revealing the 
complex role of marine mammals in exerting top-down control within marine 
ecosystems and is crucial for developing effective conservation strategies. The 
harbour porpoise Phocoena phocoena is the most abundant cetacean species in the 
North Sea, and most studies on its diet are based on traditional hard part 
analysis in stomachs providing limited knowledge of its complex feeding 
ecology. Here, we combined stomach content analysis (SCA), metabarcoding and 
stable isotope analysis on the same 48 individuals, stranded between 2005 and 
2021, to elucidate the diet of harbour porpoises in the southern North Sea. We 
aimed to increase prey species detection rates and to uncover temporal changes 
in the diet by comparing individual diets immediately prior to stranding with 
assimilated diets. By using SCA and metabarcoding complementarily, we were able 
to increase species detection by 49% on an individual sample level and 
uncovered a previously unknown prey species, hooknose Agonus cataphractus. 
Adult harbour porpoises primarily obtain energy from common sole Solea solea 
and sandeels, while juveniles rely mainly on whiting Merlangius merlangus, 
reflecting distinct energy sources aligned with biomass estimates. Direct 
method comparison revealed great temporal dietary differences in adult and 
juvenile porpoises. Near-shore species with a benthic carbon source contributed 
most to the short-term diet, whereas offshore species with a pelagic carbon 
source contributed most to the long-term diet. This framework can be extended 
to other ecosystems and predator species to elucidate the species-specific 
diets of animals where direct observations are not feasible.
The open access publication is available here: https://doi.org/10.3354/meps14787
Please do get in touch if you have any questions (eileen.he...@wur.nl).
Thank you very much,
Eileen
On behalf of all the co-authors
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