胃を開かずにウナギの食事がわかる!~個体を守りつつ生態を探る新手法を確立~

2026-02-04 東京大学

東京大学大気海洋研究所を中心とする研究グループは、絶滅危惧種を多く含むウナギ属魚類を対象に、胃を開かずに食性を調べられる非致死的な胃内容物調査法を確立した。チューブと鉗子を用いて麻酔下で胃内容物を回収する手法を開発し、奄美大島の河川に生息するオオウナギで有効性を検証した。その結果、チューブ法で胃内容物全体の平均約76.5%、分類群ベースで約92%を採取でき、体サイズや胃充満度に依存しないことが示された。チューブで回収困難な大型甲殻類についても、鉗子を併用することで完全採取が可能となった。本手法により、個体を傷つけず同一個体から繰り返しデータ取得が可能となり、ウナギの詳細な摂餌生態解明と保全に大きく貢献すると期待される。

胃を開かずにウナギの食事がわかる!~個体を守りつつ生態を探る新手法を確立~

チューブを用いた胃内容物採取

<関連情報>

淡水ウナギの非致死的胃内容物分析法の開発:Anguilla marmorataに対するチューブ法の実証的評価 Development of a non-lethal stomach content analysis method for freshwater eels: An empirical evaluation of the tube method for Anguilla marmorata

Tatsuhiko Maeda, Hikaru Itakura, Ryoshiro Wakiya, Shingo Kimura

Journal of Fish Biology  Published: 27 August 2025

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1111/jfb.70198

Abstract

Understanding the feeding habits of predatory fish is essential for unravelling food web structures and implementing conservation strategies in riverine ecosystems. However, conventional lethal stomach content analysis methods are not necessarily appropriate for long-term dietary studies, particularly for threatened species, as they require large sample sizes due to the inability to repeatedly analyse stomach contents from the same individuals. This study aimed to develop and validate a non-lethal stomach content analysis method using tubes for the giant mottled eel Anguilla marmorata, a representative tropical anguillid species. A total of 205 eels were collected from nine rivers on Amami–Ohshima Island, Japan. Among 102 eels, including stomach contents, the tube method achieved an average removal efficiency of 76.5% (biomass content) and a detection rate of 92.4% for prey categories, effectively capturing dietary composition without significant bias. The most important food items were prawns (mainly Macrobrachium), crabs and fish, but aquatic insects, terrestrial invertebrates and a few snails were also eaten. Although crabs were less efficiently removed due to their body size or hard exoskeletons, supplementary use of forceps allowed complete collection of their stomach contents. The removal efficiency was not significantly influenced by eel size, stomach fullness or prey type, suggesting broad applicability of this method. Our findings demonstrate that the tube method, combined with forceps when necessary, offers a powerful non-lethal tool for investigating individual-level feeding ecology of anguillid eels, enabling long-term dietary monitoring and supporting conservation of declining populations. This method will advance ecological understanding and sustainable management of anguillid eels and their freshwater habitats, and this is especially true for tropical eels whose feeding ecology has rarely been studied.

1404水産水域環境
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